FWIW,
I second the use of ghostbsd if you want to try it. Easy install and packages easily installed with the package manager GUI.
I used it for quite a while and really like BSD's but I could never get the sound to work on my hardware, either with freebsd or ghostbsd. I chalked it up to operator difficulty not knowing enough to correct it. Back to linux on the machine that needed sound.
It seemed (maybe just me) it has a different 'feel' (smoother I thought) to it than linux.
I also use opnsense for my firewall. Nicely done.
73
Charles
On Friday, June 14th, 2024 at 4:27 AM, Martin Steigerwald <martin@???> wrote:
>
dng@???">--protonSignature--dng@??? - 14.06.24, 12:11:04 CEST:
> As always it depends of your intended use of the OS. For a pc/laptop I
> would go for GhostBSD (based on FreeBSD) with its desktop orientation.
Good to mention that one. :)
Installation a desktop on other BSD's can be a bit more daunting.
--
Martin
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