I did out of curiosity once. It worked out of a VM on my desktop, but I couldn’t get it working on my laptop. I think it didn’t have drivers for that Wi-Fi chip, but I can’t say for sure. It makes you appreciate how refined Linux distressed have become.
Simplicity in all the good and bad ways. They also claim to be more secure but I’m not sure if that really applies anymore.
Many security-related things started as an OpenBSD project, like openssh. They don’t shy away from making drastic decisions for the sake of quality. For instance, in 2014 when they noticed their bluetooth stack or bluetooth as a concept sort of sucked, they didn’t rewrite it. They removed it. I don’t think it has been rewritten yet.
If you want to see what linux was like 15 years ago try installing OpenBSD lol
I did out of curiosity once. It worked out of a VM on my desktop, but I couldn’t get it working on my laptop. I think it didn’t have drivers for that Wi-Fi chip, but I can’t say for sure. It makes you appreciate how refined Linux distressed have become.
Is there a use case that makes openBSD desirable? I’ve heard of it but don’t know the main selling point
It makes a good router/firewall! I used to work at a place that used it in production for this purpose.
Simplicity in all the good and bad ways. They also claim to be more secure but I’m not sure if that really applies anymore.
Many security-related things started as an OpenBSD project, like openssh. They don’t shy away from making drastic decisions for the sake of quality. For instance, in 2014 when they noticed their bluetooth stack or bluetooth as a concept sort of sucked, they didn’t rewrite it. They removed it. I don’t think it has been rewritten yet.
It really wasn’t that bad if not for WiFi drivers. Considering you were comparing it to XP.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LArSWavNqPg