In my previous post I described that my tech decisions are largely ideology-driven. I switched to Linux because Microsoft turned to the dark side and it was becoming a chore to use anyway. I switched to Startpage because Google went over to the dark side, with data mining and spyware and all kindsa evil stuff. I switched from Firefox to Brave because Mozilla went woke, partnered with Google, and took their famous browser down an ever-darkening path. ISPs, cellphone companies, all the same story – switching whenever possible for ethical reasons. My most recent post describes how Linux – right down to the very kernel itself – has also turned to the dark side. Do I still have a choice now? Microsoft is over-the-top evil, Apple is crazy expensive and also ethically challenged at points. So now that Linux has been twisted into a Microshit/IBM/Politically-correct mess, what else is there?
Glad you asked. Lookie here:
This here is GhostBSD, with the Xfce desktop and Cairo-dock tied on just for some fun eye candy. You can use whatever desktop you like in any of the BSDs, but my readers know what a Xfce fanboy I’ve become after trying most of the others. I may experiment with Openbox again, since I grew to love it so much in Crunchbang Linux years ago.
Like Debian Linux with it’s Stable and Testing branches, BSD offers Stable and Current. I always stick with Stable, being the techno-phobic boy I am, still scared that pushing the wrong button on my computer might ignite the atmosphere and annihilate all life on Earth. How did such a tech-scared user end up on BSD for cry’n out loud?
Because just like Ubuntu – before it turned crazy – made Debian Linux usable by us ordinary mortals, GhostBSD is doing the same thing for FreeBSD! It ain’t quite as simple as Ubuntu, Mint, or MX-Linux, but I’m not exactly a total novice at this stuff anymore, and merely using it one can’t help but learn a little. It’s important that we do! You wouldn’t just take off in a new car without reading the owner’s manual or at least be familiar with it’s basic features. Responsible computing means you do a little reading and research before diving in. I did that – but not much – and I still got it right the first time as if I knew what I was doing!
GhostBSD is built on FreeBSD Stable, with cool tools and GUI (Graphical User Interface, pronounced “gooey”) apps to make it simple for us point-and-click users who are taking our first steps into the BSDs. Perhaps many users move on to the other BSDs, and many – like Linux Mint users, perhaps – just stay put. I love learning, but I’m slow at it. But let me tell you what’s to love about the BSDs besides the simplicity and utility of GhostBSD:
The BSDs are faithful to “the UNIX way” of doing things. There’s no “one ring to rule them all” big-brother-like supervisory software watching and logging and evaluating every little freaking process like systemd on most Linux distributions. There’s no corporate sponsors shoveling money into the projects in an effort to buy influence or assert control – also unlike Linux, whose lead developer is paid a huge, exorbitant salary by the Linux Foundation which has been effectively bought my Microsoft and IBM. Has that money influenced the Linux kernel? How could it not?! BSD is free of that happy horse hockey. Apples IOS and Sony’s Playstation software are both built from the BSDs, didjya know that? Yeah! But they didn’t try to take over the project. At least no one’s doing it yet.
BSD is FAST on even modest hardware. I mean, zoom, zing, whoosh fast. Blazing, mind-bending speed, and it doesn’t “eat all your RAM” the way Linux does. It really is different from Linux even though they’re both built from UNIX. Linux doesn’t love it’s mother the way BSD does. It’s not what Mom hoped it would grow up to be. It forsook it’s noble heritage and embraced the dark side, lured by big bucks from big corporate players. Little does Linux know, even though it’s been warned over and over again, that EMBRACE –> EXTEND –> EXTINGUISH is and always has been Microsoft’s strategy. Linux will be assimilated, and resistance – now that it has accepted Microsoft’s money and influence – is futile.
Enjoy your glamor and fame while you may, Linux, but it comes at a great price. BSD hasn’t got the nanoprobes and can still resist the Borg. Even though there are four or five BSDs, they all share that faithfulness to UNIX and the freedom and openness it provides. The BSDs operate under a different license as well, rather than GNU, which also provides a measure of resistance to the Borg. Yet it’s still free in every sense.
Yup, it’s still all about ethics for this boy, and yes, there are still alternatives to compromising with evil.











