I downloaded the VirtualBSD 9 Torrent, unzipped it, and changed the file name (per Mac OS X needs) to Virtual BSD 9.0.vmwarevm, and followed the instructions, and POOF, I had a freaking perfect Install of FreeBSD! Damn impressive! I changed the passwords, its all good. The hardest part for me was finding the file to open again after shutting down the Virtual Box. I have to work on this. This video should be linked to the VirtualBSD site. I think VirtualBSD should have a Google+ page. Awesome BSD
Thanks for posting this video! I have been through about 150 Blank DVD now downloading and Installing various Linux & BSD OS's to replace my OS X which (I am tired of Apple anymore, might as well be Windows) I hate anymore. Sifting through all the Linux stuff can be a chore. I found only a handful of Linux I would keep around for future fun, Knoppix, Arch Linux, Arch Bang, openSUSE, aptosid; but I always go back to FreeBSD to try to get it right. Installing to Hard Drive on a MacBook Pro is hard
there is a way to convert a Virtual cd to a normal installed version - google it
poojkhgf 3 weeks ago
I downloaded the VirtualBSD 9 Torrent, unzipped it, and changed the file name (per Mac OS X needs) to Virtual BSD 9.0.vmwarevm, and followed the instructions, and POOF, I had a freaking perfect Install of FreeBSD! Damn impressive! I changed the passwords, its all good. The hardest part for me was finding the file to open again after shutting down the Virtual Box. I have to work on this. This video should be linked to the VirtualBSD site. I think VirtualBSD should have a Google+ page. Awesome BSD
wildegeist 3 weeks ago
@wildegeist Thanks for the kind words!
essayboard 3 weeks ago
Thanks for posting this video! I have been through about 150 Blank DVD now downloading and Installing various Linux & BSD OS's to replace my OS X which (I am tired of Apple anymore, might as well be Windows) I hate anymore. Sifting through all the Linux stuff can be a chore. I found only a handful of Linux I would keep around for future fun, Knoppix, Arch Linux, Arch Bang, openSUSE, aptosid; but I always go back to FreeBSD to try to get it right. Installing to Hard Drive on a MacBook Pro is hard
wildegeist 3 weeks ago