Alaksiej,
I used Kubuntu 7.04 for the linux system. For FreeBSD, I had to use
FreeBSD 7.0, since FreeBSD 6.2-R could not boot (no matter what I did,
it just wouldn't work). As for the laptop's hardware, it came with a
Broadcom BCM4321AG (14e4:4328) Mini-PCIe card, which I removed since it
doesn't work at all in FreeBSD and constantly dropped the connection in
Linux. For wireless, I'm now using a Linksys WUSBF54G, which requires
the zyd(4) module. Other than that, the machine is all OEM.
Why FreeBSD 6.2-R would not work:
Normal boot: hardlock on attach of hard drive (ad4)
ACPI Disabled: hardlock on attach of network (nfe0)
ACPI and nfe disabled: hardlock on attach of hard drive (ad4)
FreeBSD 6.2-R does not seem to like the nVidia MCP51 Serial ATA
controller, but FreeBSD 7.0 is just fine. Started with FreeBSD
7.0-CURRENT 200709 and now have 7.0-BETA3. Must use GRUB to load the
loader (but the CD boots fine).
~Jessica
Alaksiej C wrote:
Thanks Jessica, it's interesting. Would you please attach some details
(linux distro, FreeBSD version, out-of-the-box or tweaked)? I will you
use it to persuade my linux-loving friend :)
Thank you in advance.
On 11/29/07, *Jessica Mahoney* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
Thinking about this for a while, I decided to post it. May not be
much,
but it is something.
In July 2007 I acquired a brand new Compaq Presario V6000Z laptop. It
came with the "High Capacity 6-Cell Battery" (6,000 mAh battery),
an AMD
Turion 64 X2 @ 1.8GHz, and I also got the "Imprint Finish" so I could
get the FireWire and additional USB ports. For what it is, $1,000
wasn't that bad.
It came with Windows Vista Home Basic. This system took about two
minutes to boot, and sucked the battery dry in 90 minutes, even
with all
power-saving settings enabled (eeps!).
Then I installed Linux on it. Linux had some serious stability
issues,
and even with everything I did, it was never all that stable, but it
booted in about a minute. Linux did do better with battery time,
clocking 2 hours. True, that's not much better, but still.
Well, I've been using FreeBSD for my servers, and I have had a few
FreeBSD desktops off and on over the years, so I decided to give it a
shot. After installing FreeBSD and configuring the kernel/world, and
then installing some ports, I noticed something wildly different, so
different, that its freaking amazing. FreeBSD boots in a mere fifteen
seconds (kernel: 11s; services: 2s; gdm+Xorg: instant; gnome-desktop:
2s). FreeBSD is just as amazing with battery time, as I can now
get not
just two, but four hours of battery time. Plus, its just as
rock-solid-will-keep-running-until-the-sun-blows-up stable as I
remember
from every other machine I've used as a FreeBSD desktop.
Quick recap:
Windows Vista: 2 minute boot, 90 minutes of battery
Linux: one minute boot, 120 minutes of battery
FreeBSD: 15 second boot, 240 minutes of battery
FreeBSD is pure awesomeness, made of awesome and win, featuring Power,
Performance, Stability, and Reliability. I have also learned (from my
laptop) that FreeBSD is also a Green OS, as it causes the hardware to
use less power than other systems.
~Jessica
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