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Date:      Tue, 9 Mar 1999 09:03:14 +0000
From:      Clem.Dye@wdr.com
To:        FreeBSD-questions@FreeBSD.ORG, hubbardj@earthlink.net
Subject:   RE: RE: Printed man pages (was: "The Complete FreeBSD", THIRD edition: question)
Message-ID:  <H00000820171125d@MHS>

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I tend to agree with your sentiments here. I currently have RH Linux 
5.0 running on a box at home and it does it's stuff, but somehow 
FreeBSD seems a more sensible choice. It's many years since I did any 
Unix sysadmin (SunOs 4.1.3) and I feel very rusty when it comes to 
Unix. A 'play' with Linux was to be my way of regaining some Unix 
expertise, but something just doesn't sit right with Linux for me. I 
too earn a living doing NT stuff (SMS, SQL, etc. etc.) and I'd like a 
mix. I plan to use FreeBSD as a mail/web gateway at home - if that 
doesn't force me to get to grips with the O/S, nothing will!

Starter books for FreeBSD are probably a waste of time, but I also 
believe that something intermediate is required. As for appealing to 
Linux/Unix wannabes, well it's fine to use Linux as a 
bandwagon/conduit, but if users then want to 'mature' and migrate to 
FreeBSD, how do they learn about it? A couple of FreeBSD-specific 
books would seem, to me at least, a good way of achieving this.


Clem

-----Original Message-----
From: hubbardj 
Sent: 09 March 1999 03:18
To: FreeBSD-questions
Cc: hubbardj
Subject: RE: Printed man pages (was: "The Complete FreeBSD", THIRD
edition: question)


  I agree with you here, Linux has become the very "bandwagon" thing 
to do.
I think that's why I'm trying FreeBSD out in the first place.  
However, the
lack of FreeBSD-specific books isn't an especially good thing either. 
 I
probably wouldn't buy a beginner oriented one at this point, I went 
from not
knowing what 'ls' did to being able to netboot a SPARC5 from another 
Linux
machine by reading through boring .txt files.  I wouldn't hesitate to 
buy a
good intermediate-to-advanced book though, especially if it was aimed
towards admins who wanted to use FreeBSD in a business environment.
  I don't think going after Joe Public like Linux is trying to do 
right now
is the right thing for FreeBSD.  If it was just like Linux I probably
wouldn't have bothered.  I have a real minimalist mindset when it 
comes to
setting up systems (ironic that I have to admin NT systems for a 
living) and
I think BSD appeals to that a lot better than Linux does.
  As for RedHat at Best Buy for $19.95, I don't think it's the worst 
news at
all.  For one thing, the fact that you can buy an OS of the shelves 
of a
national chain store that's NOT MADE BY M$ is a big step, even better 
that
it's a UNIX-based one.  At this point, RH Linux makes a better 
introduction
to UNIX for people who've never seen it than FreeBSD does, it's better
suited for it, so why not see it as paving the way?  While home 
computer
enthusiasts keep reading about Linux on ZDNet and trying it out, 
there will
always be people like me who got into UNIX through Linux but decide 
that
FreeBSD is better suited to their needs.


> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
> [mailto:owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG]On Behalf Of David Kelly
> Sent: Monday, March 08, 1999 8:05 PM
> To: Clem.Dye@wdr.com
> Cc: FreeBSD-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
> Subject: Re: Printed man pages (was: "The Complete FreeBSD", THIRD
> edition: question)
>
>
> Clem.Dye@wdr.com writes:
> > If you compare what's currently available for FreeBSD verses 
Linux,
> > it's clear that there's a long way to go. Without accessible 
printed
> > material, I don't see how Joe Public is ever really going to hear
> > about FreeBSD as a viable alternative to Linux or other commercial
> > O/S'es.
>
> One of the things that bugged me when I was trying to be a Linux 
user
> was the volume of books on the Un*x bookshelf with the word, 
"Linux" in
> the title. It appeared to me that any wannabe author with an 
otherwise
> unsellable book simply had to insert "Linux" in the title to get it
> published. Similarly these days companies shout, "We're on the
> Internet!" to drive up their stock prices.
>
> Possibly the worst news for FreeBSD recently was this Sunday's Best 
Buy
> flyer in the paper. Listed Red Hat Linux for $19.95.
>
>
> --
> David Kelly N4HHE, dkelly@nospam.hiwaay.net
> 
=====================================================================
> The human mind ordinarily operates at only ten percent of its
> capacity -- the rest is overhead for the operating system.
>
>
>
>
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