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Date:      Sun, 2 Aug 1998 22:24:11 -0400
From:      "Dru" <genisis@istar.ca>
To:        <freebsd-newbies@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   RE: What tipped the balance
Message-ID:  <005d01bdbe85$d2dbf440$7501d8cf@genisis>

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>> Someone asked me in private mail why I chose FreeBSD instead of another
>> OS, and I thought it might make an interesting topic.

Sorry to take so long to add my bit; I had to recuperate after reading David
Wolfskill's two cents <grin>.

I'm at the opposite end of the newbies spectrum.  Never touched so much as a
computer keyboard til 2 years ago when the family decided it was time to buy
a PC for Xmas and join the rest of the computer generation.  Hold the
groans, but it was a Radio Shack special (which I'm still paying for) that
was loaded with (what else) but Windows. In fact, it was Compaq's beta
version of Windows, but that's another story.

It didn't take me long to figure out that I had a knack for this computer
stuff and I soon mastered all the Windows tips, tweaks, and Registry hacks I
could get my hands on.  At the time I was in a deadbeat job, so I took the
plunge and decided to go back to school and networking sounded challenging.
The only school in my area was offering Novell certifications, so I obtained
my CNE.  Then they began to offer Microsoft certifications, so I started my
MCSE.  Along the way, I discovered the Internet and found a greater wealth
of information there.

Around school, you would sometimes hear the word Unix (usually whispered in
hushed, reverent tones) and how anyone who learned this strange language
would achieve demigod status.  I figured it was time for a Yahoo search, and
guess which was the first site I encountered?  Thank god for Yahoo search
engines.

Anyways, the word free was a good hook for a starving student; the home Web
site for freebsd.org was just as intriguing.  I knew I had to get my hands
on this system and wrap my brain around Unix.  That was in March, I finally
got installed in June, and hope to have my own kernel and ppp working by the
end of summer and say goodbye to Windows forever.

As a side note, I'm finding it very hard to concentrate on my MCSE studies
as freebsd is much more interesting; I've had to relegate freebsd time to my
limited leisure time; once I graduate in September, I'll have more spare
time as I'll only have to balance work and freebsd.  Why the delay from
March til present?  I started out with Greg Lehey's Complete Freebsd but had
a problem with blindly following commands when I didn't have a clue what I
was doing (sort of like ordering off a menu written in Chinese; I like to
know what I'm getting into beforehand).  Took some time off to read Unix
Unleashed to get some basic understanding of Unix commands and syntax. Armed
with that and my networking knowledge and the increasing info on freebsd on
the Internet, I should be ok.

Well, that's it for now; hope I didn't put you all to sleep,



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