# I am the Watcher. I am your guide through this vast new twtiverse.
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i originally started out using freeBSD years ago. then over the years eventually linux took over for me. first it was slackware, then redhat, mandrake, debian, ubuntu, arch etc etc etc. but recently i've been back on OpenBSD... and not having to deal with systemd is really quite nice. :P
@bml Have you come across my take on Linux yet uLinux? 😁
@bml Have you come across my take on Linux yet uLinux? 😁
@bml Have you come across my take on Linux yet uLinux? 😁
@prologic ah! this looks really interesting! thank you for this! downloading the iso now and going to check it out. can i run this on bare metal, 32bit cpu? i have this old 32bit netbook that i want to try and revive too.
@bml Probably if you recompile the Kernel with 32bit support 🤣
@bml Probably if you recompile the Kernel with 32bit support 🤣
@bml Probably if you recompile the Kernel with 32bit support 🤣
@prologic been testing out uLinux that past hour or so, and it's pretty neat! i never never booted into a *nix prompt so fast, less than a half a second. amazing! :)*
Hahah! 🤣 Really glad you like it so far! 😀 That was actually one of my goals, was to make it boot insanely fast, so I was _quite_ deliberate in it's design and component choices. Most of the system is comprised of shell scripts and the busybox userland and the finit init daemon. uLinux's secondary goal was to be a lightweight container ready OS, so it comes ready to run Docker and any other container orchestration system including box and others... 👌
Hahah! 🤣 Really glad you like it so far! 😀 That was actually one of my goals, was to make it boot insanely fast, so I was _quite_ deliberate in it's design and component choices. Most of the system is comprised of shell scripts and the busybox userland and the finit init daemon. uLinux's secondary goal was to be a lightweight container ready OS, so it comes ready to run Docker and any other container orchestration system including box and others... 👌
Hahah! 🤣 Really glad you like it so far! 😀 That was actually one of my goals, was to make it boot insanely fast, so I was _quite_ deliberate in it's design and component choices. Most of the system is comprised of shell scripts and the busybox userland and the finit init daemon. uLinux's secondary goal was to be a lightweight container ready OS, so it comes ready to run Docker and any other container orchestration system including box and others... 👌
@bml just on OpenBSD, how's the hardware support? in terms of drivers etc. I can never quite tell looking at the site. I used to play around with FreeBSD a bit which I enjoyed, I think it's the only BSD I've tried though.
@bml just on OpenBSD, how's the hardware support? in terms of drivers etc. I can never quite tell looking at the site. I used to play around with FreeBSD a bit which I enjoyed, I think it's the only BSD I've tried though.
@eldersnake i recently installed OpenBSD on an old lenovo netbook and so far everything seems to be working good including power management/suspend. it's day 2 now of this install though...\n\ni think you are correct. overall OpenBSD's hardware support for desktops and servers are good but for laptops in general it's kind of... although thinkpads and lenovo laptops seem to have better support within OpenBSD.\n\ni'm really excited about FreeBSD's upcoming release 13.0. i think i'll definitely switch to that for my main daily computing.