Welcome, and good luck in all your endevours. I could never get my head around which UNIX is the real UNIX, yes Linux is a bastardized-UNIX, but hey, in the real world, its whatever gets you through the nite. AT&T/BSD, later Sun, later, ... unix(OS-wise) really is a beautiful mystery wrapped up in an enigma that in itself, is becoming less, and less invisible everyday. and thats good. "Security, Performace, and/or Automation", from an admin's perspective, you can only pick really "1" of those. When redhat/RHEL went the IBM dodo bird way, we simply moved (ALL of our web-servers') over to "CentOS"-linux. But for security, it has primarily been OpenBSD, with a smattering of FreeBSD for specific/historical apps. Lately, OpenSolaris, becuase of ZFS, playin' around with this idea or that idea,..., but who knows? Unfortunately, I'm not a developer by any means, i had worked primarily in production server environments.
I personally wish FreeBSD would be given much more attention than Linux, but I'm just an admin who had to follow orders. I'm sure any help FreeBSD-wise will always be welcome though, so HI, and have fun. :) Rick. > Date: Sat, 2 Jan 2010 20:20:37 -0600 > From: p...@joseph-a-nagy-jr.us > To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org > Subject: Greetings and Salutations > > I've recently downloaded FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE and am hopefully going to > have it up and running on my computer (a different machine then the one > I'm writing from) by the end of next week so I thought I'd introduce > myself and tell a little bit about myself. > > I started using Linux (I know, I know, FreeBSD is Unix) around 1997, > 1998 (I forget exactly when) with RedHat 6.2 on a IBM PC330 (90MHz > original Pentium overclocked to 100MHz, couple hundred megs of RAM, > 500MB primary hard disk drive (later on I stuck in a second hard drive > even thought the computer I was using didn't really have a place for > it)). It wasn't pretty, but that was my first real taste of Linux. > > I've run web servers for my own personal use and was always pleased with > the results, ease of configuration and setup, and overall feeling that > even though I'm exposing part of my computer to the Internet, that I'm > still limiting the amount of damage that can be done because of other > steps I've taken to insure that I remain safe. > > Since then I've used various distros (sticking mainly with RedHat until > 8.0, just before it become Fedora). My favorite one being Gentoo. > > So why have I decided to use FreeBSD? There are several reasons. The > main one is that I'm constantly looking toward increase my security > while computing. While there are steps I could take to make the OS I'm > currently using (MS Windows XP Home), I feel that it's like putting a > band-aid on gaping wound. It might do some good, but I know it won't > last for long. Another reason is that I've heard a good friend of mine > sing the praises of FreeBSD on many fronts (the least of which is > security). > > I've also run, for a short time, the McMinnville (McMinnville, TN not > Oregon) Linux and Unix User Group (MC-LUUG). A group I'm looking to > resurrect as several of my local Facebook friends have expressed > interest in running at least Linux. Since I also will be returning > (eventually) to Linux as well as introducing myself to FreeBSD, I > figured what the hey. At least I can help myself! > > Sorry this is so long, I didn't realize I had so much to say! > > Thanks for taking the time to read this and I hope we get a chance to > help each other once I get FreeBSD installed. > > Sincerely, > > PIT > _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live: Keep your friends up to date with what you do online. http://go.microsoft.com/?linkid=9691815_______________________________________________ freebsd-chat@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-chat To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-chat-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"