Book recommendation (again)

Lute Mullenix lute at vfemail.net
Mon Jan 17 00:26:13 PST 2005


On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 21:25:44 -0500
Ted Goranson <tedg at alum.mit.edu> insisted:

> I am a complete newbie, with only the most superficial (ie Fedora)
> experience.
> 
> I have 5.3 and am stuck. I'd like to find a book that helps me with 
> just a few things, but: for someone not a systems administrator who 
> wants to set up a workstation.
> 
> As an example of the level needed, where I'm stuck is I don't know 
> how to configure X from the incredibly primitive default setup.
> 
> I wish to install and configure Fluxbox and Fluxspace, set up Emacs 
> with all sorts of goodies (got sufficient docs on that excepting 
> using ports), and vnc (or similar) from OSX.
> 
> The online handbook wasn't helpful for my first problem. Complete 
> FreeBSD, Absolute BSD, and Design and Implementation seem targeted 
> toward admins and server setups. Am I wrong?
> 
> Best, Ted

I noticed in another reply that you have been steered to one of the best
resources to setting up X on FreeBSD. As far as books go, my favorite is
FreeBSD An Open Source Operating System For Your Personal Computer. By
Annelise Anderson. This is the book that actually got me using FreeBSD and
I have not used anything else since then. I have a couple others but this
book and the Handbook are all I have needed to keep me up and running.
Well and a little help from online groups.

Good luck and have fun.


-- 
 Lute

It's OK to be different
FreeBSD 5.3 RELEASE



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