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On Mon, 10 Mar 2025, Salvador Mirzo wrote:
>>>I wouldn't say it died. I believe Plan 9 is doing pretty well, but I>
don't think they're trying to compete with popular systems. It's a
research system, I'd say. OpenBSD is a research system, even though
it's totally usable. In fact, it's the one I like to use.
Would be nice if someone took Plan 9 and managed to get it to run natively on
servers and laptops, or even one brand of server and one brand of laptop. I
would definitely try it!
I've ran Plan 9 on an x86 virtual machine, which means it will probably
install okay on popular hardware. I think some people do run Plan 9 as
their daily system.
Interesting! I'll have to look into that to see if it would run on an older
laptop. That would be awesome!
>How is openbsd as a daily driver? I've been close to replacing my>
opensuse with freebsd. It wasn't quite there in terms of hardware
support (it lacked anything beyond G wifi, which is too slow). Maybe
openbsd is better than freebsd?
I got in the BSD world by way of FreeBSD. What attracted me to FreeBSD
was the documentation in the system---manuals in particular---and I also
appreciated the ports collection. (It was so much easier to compile and
I agree! The documentation and the community is outstanding!
>run an application back then than it was to hunt for sources in the GNU>
systems worlds. That allowed me to make small changes in the software I
was running to learn about how it worked.) In more recent years I had
switched to Windows due to working with companies that required me to
run a Windows system. (Also due to personal reasons: when I was in
graduate school, I wanted to keep all my software in a single directory,
which was easy on Windows and hard on UNIX. But to use Windows, I
needed a GNU EMACS packed with other programs such as cat, grep, find,
awk, sed, ...) The work and personal reasons have gone away, so I
decided to go FreeBSD again. But ever since hibernation was implemented
in Windows XP that I love the feature. It turns out FreeBSD doesn't
hibernate, but OpenBSD does (on my amd64 computer). And then I
Hmm, really? I think I got it to work on Freebas 14.x or a snapshot of 15 a long
time ago, but I don't quite remember, so could very well be that I tricked
myself with suspend. Since I only used it for a week, I didn't check too deeply.
discovered that OpenBSD is as impeccable in the documentation as FreeBSD>
is. So I went with OpenBSD. I have not found a way to run OpenBSD in a
battery-saving mode, though, so my entire battery last about an hour
with OpenBSD, while it would likely last the entire day with Windows 10,
say. There's probably things I can do that I don't know how to do at
the moment. I'm hardly ever in need of a battery, though. So I'm a
pretty happy OpenBSD user.
Freebsd I got 13-14 hours out of, and my current opensuse running on a 1.5 year
old laptop still sits at around 12-14 hours.
I also learned about cwm, the ``calm window manager'', which I think it>
was built by the OpenBSD people. It's the window manager that has
enchanted me the most.
Yes, I've heard about it. I like the concept! I run XFCE, since it is a nice
compromise between batteries included, and some kind of lightness. For business
it works great. If I only did development, I'd look at cwm or perhaps dwm.
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