Um. Ok.
first of all, no one will respond with a subject like that.
Secondly in a polite manner, I tried to interprete your questions so bare with me.

- it looks like youre referring to 2 fat32 partitions that you want to install freebsd over. I am assuming this is what you mean by "establish BSD atop". you can resize the partitions to make room for the bsd slice(s) you're going to create via freebsd installation.

-"At installation BSD then it is impossible to start Windows."
When you install freebsd are you installing the freebsd bootloader, or are you just simply overwriting the MBR to only boot freebsd?

-BSD does not have a graphical interface, but BSD does support X Windows. This is pretty identical to linux - the core operating system is command line based, gui support is managed through x windows.

-if you sucessfully boot up your computer and reach the login prompt for freebsd, then it looks like you sucessfully have installed freebsd. but from what it sounds like you have a while until you satisfy your needs that you want from FreeBSD. you can always send questions to the mailing list - we're willing to help.

Have you checked out the FreeBSD handbook? pretty self explanatory assuming you have a good level of experience with understanding computers, etc.
http://www.freebsd.org/handbook

hope some of this helps, reply if you have any more questions,
Ben

zick-1 wrote:

Hello.

Recently has ordered disks with Free BSD and has decided to establish on
the computer. At once I shall tell, that with FreeBSD it is familiar
very little and consequently.
There were many questions. Before from Unix similar established and started Debian Linux. But in FreeBSD all differently...

1) I can not establish BSD atop Windows NT. The disk is broken into two parts
ะก:/and D:/. On With: it is established Windows (FAT32), D empty (FAT32). And
in my opinion BSD does not see the second disk. At installation BSD then it is 
impossible
to start Windows.

2) Whether has BSD the graphic interface? Or all works through #root?
3) Whether means that the system is established presence:
login: root
#



In the literature on a disk very few concrete explanations.




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