is it true that freebsd15 get kde as default?
wow,finally, freebsd will link into nomal guys.

wow,finally, freebsd will link into nomal guys.

Unfortunately, it is a big deal when the difference is a few GB in download size, and a need for a more powerful processor (and more RAM) to run the graphical installer at all. Yeah, the FreeBSD project does offer small-sized stuff likeIt's just an option in the installer. So no big deal ...
mini-memstick
or bootonly
, but it does take paying attention to what you're getting.It's just an option in the installer. So no big deal ...
wow,finally, freebsd will link into nomal guys.
Then pick one Linux distro - the right one for you. MacOS was also a choice. Or Windows. (It's pretty stable these days; we're not dealing with 95/98 anymore.)i really want a stable, free and “whole one” system to run.
pkg install xorg
pkg install drm-kmod
(the GPU kernel module ("driver", for Windows users)) pkg install [packagename of your chosen DE/WM]
...interesting definition of no(r)mal: KDE unavoidable by default. If so I prefer to stay an eccentric maniac. Then pick one Linux distro - the right one for you. MacOS was also a choice. Or Windows. (It's pretty stable these days; we're not dealing with 95/98 anymore.) What's wrong with them? Let me guess: None of those are precisely what you're looking for to the point exactly. Well, then I have bad news for you, normal one: Welcome to reality! You can chose between two options, and two options, only: 1. Customize your individually tailored operating system suit your wishes best - which FreeBSD was for. That means you need to learn how to customize it, and then - yeah - do it yourself.
Or 2. If you want an operating system everything prechosen, preconfigured, preinstalled, autoinstalling, autoconfiguring, autochosen served on a silver platter, you always have to compromise. Today here is a large numer of choices, you may pick from. And if KDE is so important to you, well, even on several Linux distros without KDE by default, you can chose and install it anyway. But you cannot have both. Nobody is going to produce an infinite number of turn-key operating systems (distributions) until by chance there will be one that fit your personal wishes exactly to the point. Well, at least not the abnormal ones. Because they are not that arrogant to think everybody else have like their personal favorite flavor. By all the "specs" you're given her, and by all I know for you best choice was openSUSE If may not the exact bullseye match (but what was?), but it comes closest to what you're looking for: It's a whole system in one, also provides all open source packages, comes with all the most popular ones already preinstalled (browser, several mediaplayers, LibreOffice, Gimp, games... a lot of stuff!), its package installer comes with a GUI, comes as turn-key autoinstalling, autoconfiguring, almost all graphic adapters are detected and installed right, KDE is default, others can be also picked from the GUI installation menu, everything by mouse clicky-clicky, it's free, it's really stable, and one of the oldest Linux distros there are (way older than Ubuntu, and more professional), so sophisticated, and mature.
For the "rest" - with one short sentence a normal one can produce the need for one abnormal one's explanation over a long post. *sigh* ...once more - again (I'm getting tired of this): IF any it will become an option in the installation menu. FreeBSD will for sure not install a prechosen DE automatically by default. Explanation: 1. Auto-GUI by default - a most stupid idea. 2. about KDE 1. Auto-GUI by default - a most stupid idea. FreeBSD is NOT "another kind of a single user desktop turn key Linux distribution", neither wants to become one, but a multipurpose operating system. This means it is also for headless servers, and multiuser servers with GUI support, and single user desktops with GUI, and single user desktops without GUI, and multiuser desktops, and embedded systems, and firewalls, and NAS,...and, and, and... - anything you can think of you could run FreeBSD on - with and without GUI. A GUI installation by default would kill all that, and reduce FreeBSD to a GUI desktop OS, only. Especially the GUI-less server application field is a large enchilada for FreeBSD. Some even say FreeBSD was for servers only, which is also wrong. And this will not be skipped just to free some KDE loving noobs from the unfreaking monstrous hard hackers only burden to install a GUI by themselves, if wanted. {put on black hat} {start hardcore hacking /* reading the handbook, and copy-paste from it */} a) install X:
pkg install xorg
pkg install drm-kmod
(the GPU kernel module ("driver", for Windows users)) add a line into /etc/rc.conf to load the right kernel module (see hb) b) decide for and pick at least one DE/WM (most difficult task, but for you already done: KDE) c) install it:pkg install [packagename of your chosen DE/WM]
done. {remove black hat} You may bring the point:"Well then all systems not needing a GUI, or don't want KDE, have to deinstall it again." So, all installations get KDE by default, then deinstall it again? Besides many systems don't even have a real GPU, which was a requirement for a successful installation with a GUI by default, the majority neither need/want any GUI at all, and especially not KDE! KDE is the most popular DE. That's right. As far as I know among all desktop environments (DE) with ~20% it's by far the largest slice of all GUIs. Gnome on second place already comes with less than 10% (Don't nail me on the exact numbers. It's just roughly by what I remembered by what I saw in some statistics.) Xfce - also a big one - comes around at maybe 2..3% of all DEs. The percentage for Xfce may differ if you compare the numbers over all open source operating system with the numbers of FreeBSD usage, because under FreeBSD it's more popular than under Linux. It's very good. I used and loved it myself for a couple of years. LXDE is also worth a try, like i3, twm, CDE, fvwm...(and I'm pretty sure I missed THE one![]()
) What does this tell you? 1. KDE is largest
2. There are - way - more than just half a dozen DE/WM. And all are used and loved by some. That's choice. That's real existing individual customazition lived. That's freedom. Only the operating systems not autoinstalling a prechosen DE support that liberty, since it's pointless to write a DE/WM for an operating system whose GUI cannot, or be changed with effort - which most then will not do. 3. But above all 20% for KDE means 80% are not using KDE - and don't want it at all. Additionally respecting the fact that app. 50% (probably it's even more) of all FreeBSD applications are without any GUI at all (servers, embedded,...) for FreeBSD means you would make ~10% (newcomers AND KDE lovers, not certain if they stay) happy, at the price to piss off ~90% long year trusty users, willing to stay as long as such BS not become reality. That was a really bad deal. That would almost kill FreeBSD. So, it's not going to happen. 2. about KDE I know KDE since its dawn. KDE's origin idea was to create a most Windows-like GUI for to make users who come from Windows and want to join Linux easier to accustom. In my eyes a most stupid idea, for two reasons: a) Changing something to make it easier for newcomers is always too short sighted. Make things easier always means to reduce choices, so lose potential. So, you're going to downgrade your system just to gather newcomers. While sooner or later everbody have to deal with the real thing, anyway. In a very short term it may work. But for sure it will backfire already in the mid term. And in the long term you killed your system. (This post already is too long to give a list of examples. But there are several.) Postponing learning effort does neither reduce learning effort, nor makes it easier, it simply just postpones it, only. b) Windows sucks! I worked with Windows 3.11, 95, 98, NT, 2000, XP, and 7. One main crucial core point for me to leave Windows (not to be confused with coming to FreeBSD) was its GUI sucks. It's weird, illogical, confusing "structured", contains many useless redundances, which make it even more incalculable. By default it's noisy, blinky, looks like somebody threw a handgrenade into a candy shop, and annoys with lots of unasked, unwanted, useless pop-up windows. From a pure GUI point of view from somebody who learned about UI design at university Windows is the worst crap(!) there is. And when I look at 8, 10, or 11 I'm so happy I left it with 7. Because my fears are proven: It became even worse. So, in my eyes it's a most stupid idea to copy that. Especially when the underlying operating system is changed. And particulary when there already are sevral other DE/WM which are exemplary for how it can be done better - even long before Microsoft came with their first GUI at all. Additionally KDE is a giant package. Besides LibreOffice, which comes with most (all?) KDE installations by default, it's one of the largest things to be installed I know. Plus a default KDE installation brings a lot of redundancies. I don't need eight of each desktop calculators, editors, mediaplayers, paint programs,.... I need one each. And a lot of stuff is installed with KDE by default I don't need, I don't want at all; e.g. the games - minesweeper clone?
I can understand when people like and use KDE. Okay. But - please - let me alone with that.. - it!
profile list
, choosing one that suits you and then eselect profile set [number_of_your_choice]
before emerge --update * @world
is actually smart and a fair one. Linux is more than debian (-based distros), or Ubuntu, only! A lot more. (Several, Gentoo, Fedora, Mint, are named here, but by far not all.)normal guy just need a choice to get official GUI.
well, if “Stuff like plugging in an external drive r/w, phone MTP, and wifi connections.”, it be much better.
I had bad experience with openSUSE (luckily, just testing in VM) – I admit, entirely my fault. It was my first contact with btrfs, I knew jack about it, snapshots filled up vmdk, and I stupidly used regular rm to make some space, not knowing that btrfs is like zfs in that regard, so I successfully brickified that VMReally, try openSUSE!
It's not debian based, comes with KDE by default (as I already said), autodetecting/mounting external drives, bluethooth... all you want.
By all my experience I had with it, and by all I understand what the OP is looking for, I'd say for the OP it was best choice, at least to take a closer closer at it.I had bad experience with openSUSE
A lot of us have been doing that for a very long time. Presenting the option to install a desktop actually has historical precedent in the FreeBSD installer.I like to install a clean system, as the current bsdinstall does. Then I like to install my favorite graphical environment, and then fine-tune the system to my liking in text configuration files. The GUI option in the installer is unnecessary.
To you. You don't represent the totality of Freebsd potential users.The GUI option in the installer is unnecessary.
False premise. Nothing proposed for 15 prevents either.do freebsd want to run into normal guys or just live in “hacker” circle?
openSUSE is what I use with Linux!I had bad experience with openSUSE (luckily, just testing in VM) – I admit, entirely my fault. It was my first contact with btrfs, I knew jack about it, snapshots filled up vmdk, and I stupidly used regular rm to make some space, not knowing that btrfs is like zfs in that regard, so I successfully brickified that VM![]()