I use it as a daily driver. I have tried to use it in some shape or form for the past 20 years.
I made a career in Linux and Windows, but always have had a heart for FreeBSD. A person I consider by technical mentor, loved FreeBSD. My first "Admin" job was at a small ISP where he worked. That was where I got my first taste of FreeBSD which I believe was version 5.3? He made sure that all consoles were set to show beastie and I really learned a ton which set up the rest of my tech career.
Later on, he committed suicide, and I use it as a daily driver in honor of him.
I have Linux vms in bhyve. I use jails, etc. I find it pleasant and I prefer it over Linux, if I do not mind its paper cuts (for Desktop use).
I had to previously use wifi dongles since it did not support AX200 at decent speeds. Since version 14 though, it has jumped leaps and bounds. I no longer need it.
What I still have to do is use a custom xorg.conf, because I have dual amd and intel video cards. If I start without it, it says I must specify Bus Ids. I can use pure wayland, but if anything requires X, I still need a working xorg.conf.
If you are willing to deal with paper cuts, and workarounds, it rocks. If you do not have time for that, it may not be for you (desktop wise).
I used to be a vim snob and thought everyone should use what I use.
I am now an Emacs lover and believe everyone should use what works for them. I grew up!
Former racker here. When RAX laid me off, I was told there was no other place for me to go (which was not true). I loved my time there and the people I learned so much from and loved working with. It hurt. I had fantastic managers who did care, but the company changed and looking back I shouldn’t have been surprised. Cog in the machine. When I was a manager elsewhere I tried to show the same care my previous managers did. I cared even if those at the top didn’t.
I agree. I have worked at various companies that use Red Hat/CentOS extensively and the only time I ever saw someone turn Selinux off was on RHEL 6. Ever since then, it has been easier and easier to use. Not saying it is perfect for everyone, but it does work and can be made to work well.
We did this at one place I used to work at. We had lots of Linux systems. We installed clamAV but kept the service disabled. The audit checkbox said “installed” and it fulfilled the checkbox…
You are. The charts are confusing. At the bottom it says full support ends May 31, 2027.
Red Hat made some strange decisions with the way they’re handling Stream vs RHEL, plus the communication was abysmal, and they changed models mid-cycle. Be mad at them for that all you want, the rest was overblown.
This company could have just used Stream 9 if he wanted a free OS. Since he’s virtualizing, he could have bought hypervisor licenses for $4k a piece that allow you to run as many VMs as your hypervisor can handle. He could have used OpenShift for virtualization and container orchestration, and just paid for the OpenShift licensing. If you use OpenShift, you can run all the RHEL VMs and UBIs you’d like at no extra cost. What you never do is pay per core. There isn’t a single licensing model from RH that forces you to do that. If you license individually, each license supports one bare metal machine, or two VMs. This guy is full of shit. He’s just mad everything isn’t $0.
Works just fine on my Dell Precision 7540. Tried briefly to get GPU passthrough to work but failed. I lack the time to seriously try. Otherwise, it works great.
I made a career in Linux and Windows, but always have had a heart for FreeBSD. A person I consider by technical mentor, loved FreeBSD. My first "Admin" job was at a small ISP where he worked. That was where I got my first taste of FreeBSD which I believe was version 5.3? He made sure that all consoles were set to show beastie and I really learned a ton which set up the rest of my tech career.
Later on, he committed suicide, and I use it as a daily driver in honor of him.
I have Linux vms in bhyve. I use jails, etc. I find it pleasant and I prefer it over Linux, if I do not mind its paper cuts (for Desktop use).
I had to previously use wifi dongles since it did not support AX200 at decent speeds. Since version 14 though, it has jumped leaps and bounds. I no longer need it.
What I still have to do is use a custom xorg.conf, because I have dual amd and intel video cards. If I start without it, it says I must specify Bus Ids. I can use pure wayland, but if anything requires X, I still need a working xorg.conf.
If you are willing to deal with paper cuts, and workarounds, it rocks. If you do not have time for that, it may not be for you (desktop wise).
Server wise, I still love it, just like 5.3 days.