Article 6XF4T GhostBSD: from usability to struggle and renewal

GhostBSD: from usability to struggle and renewal

by
Thom Holwerda
from OSnews on (#6XF4T)

This article isn't meant to be technical. Instead, it offers a high-level view of what happened through the years with GhostBSD, where the project stands today, and where we want to take it next. As you may know, GhostBSD is a user-friendly desktop BSD operating system built with FreeBSD. Its mission is to deliver a simple, stable, and accessible desktop experience for users who want FreeBSD's power without the complexity of manual setup. I started this journey as a non-technical user. I dreamed of a BSD that anyone could use.

Eric Turgeon at the FreeBSD Foundation's website

I'm very glad to see this article published on the website of the FreeBSD Foundation. I firmly believe that especially FreeBSD has all the components to become an excellent desktop alternative to desktop Linux distributions, especially now that the Linux world is moving fast with certain features and components not everyone likes. FreeBSD could serve as a valid alternative.

GhostBSD plays an important role in this. It offers not just an easily installable FreeBSD desktop, but also several tools to make managing such an installation easier, like in-house graphical user interfaces for managing Wi-Fi and other networks, backups, updates, installing software, and more. They also recently moved from UFS to ZFS, and intend to develop graphical tools to expose ZFS's features to users.

GhostBSD can always use more contributors, so if you have the skills, interest, and time, do give it a go.

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