On 6/3/2012 17:51, Mehmet Erol Sanliturk wrote:
Always I am stressing that to manage FreeBSD,  a fair amount of expertise
is required which I think this level may be reduced by improving the
FreeBSD management by transferring knowledge to its managing parts ( for
example : package management , repair of broken parts , installation steps
to reach a state like in very easily usable Linux distributions such as
Fedora , Mageia , Mandriva , and many others , etc. )

Yeah or a GUI to reduce the need for knowledge transfer.

You know what to do by your expertise gained over use , which such an
expertise is completely missing in a new comer , and even sometimes in very
highly experienced computer professionals because a different operating
system reduces them to a little experienced new starter .


I agree and your issue with USB sticks proves my point. I've never tried to mount an NTFS USB stick and I'm OK with that. But for you it is a big hassle (understandably so) and it has definitely negatively impacted your view of FreeBSD.

Compare the cost of a Linux or Windows and personal time , and make a
decision which one to choose .

Another point frequently mentioned is that FreeBSD is leaned toward servers
.
Only I want to say that , "Please , install a CentOS , Debian , or Windows
Server trial , and see how a server may be ..."

I manage Windows, CentOS and Debian (and RedHat and a few others) servers too. I've found FreeBSD is more reliable on the whole and takes less time to maintain (which means less expensive for my clients). This is one area where FreeBSD shines. And when things do break it is possible to recover fairly easily. That is another.

And yes, in terms of that initial learning curve my experience helps but its the OS that is doing the work here. If I was more experienced with Windows or Linux it wouldn't make them any easier to update, either though. So there is a point at which "knowing what to do" stops being the limiting issue and its just "ok well this is broken now and it can't be cost-effectively fixed". That crossover point is something that is almost never reached with FreeBSD in my experience.

All of this is completely parallel and unrelated to your (or another person's) experience as a desktop user though. What you see is "USB thumbdrives don't work" :) So you decide to use another OS, and probably wouldn't advocate for FreeBSD if presented the chance in a server context because of that experience. That is a shame in my book. (I know I'm putting words in your mouth but its simply to illustrate my thinking on how public perception is formed).

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