FreeBSD on workplace ASUS and private Acer Aspire laptops

   I'm trying to get rid of Ubuntu and the systemd world, and have started
   with my workplace ASUS laptop. Since some weeks, every now and then it
   did not correctly set the videomode anymore, and reported about some
   "unity issues" which seem to have started with an update. This finally
   gave me the excuse to erase the whole thing and install FreeBSD.

   I started with an old CD-ROM with FreeBSD 8.2, and then climbed through
   the updates (8.4, 9.2, 10.4, 11.2 currently), which went rather smooth,
   each step only taking about twenty minutes using e.g freebsd-update -r
   8.4-RELEASE upgrade etc and following the prompts.

   However, I ran into an issue when moving from 10.4 to 11.2 because
   apparently the disk numbering scheme had changed between the two, and
   so in /etc/fstab was still e.g /dev/ad4s1a but the disk now was named
   /dev/ada0s1a and therefore was no longer found at booting. As I'm still
   more used to the Linux way of device numbering, this was not
   immediately obvious to me, and so I needed some web searching to sort
   it out (and mounting the root device RW in the emergency shell and
   correcting the names, of course). Then it worked well.

   I haven't yet installed X, because most of the time anyway I worked in
   a terminal window on Ubuntu. That will be another time.

   What I do need however is of course git, and so then next thing was pkg
   install git but this posed another small problem: I was puzzled by a
   "user 'git_daemon' disappeared during update" error and a broken git
   install. Web searching brought me to a helpful explanation that this
   may be due to an out-of-sync state of the passwd database, and that
   vipw without changing anything but saving might work. Indeed, but I
   wouldn't have solved that one on my own, I suppose! ^-^

   Now at home, I have also updated my old Acer Aspire (1.6 GHz Intel Atom
   with 100 GB HDD) from 11.1 to 11.2, and I'm really really pleased by
   the easiness and stability of the upgrades. I never had Ubuntu on this
   machine, only the preinstalled "Linpus Linux" (which was totally
   obsolete and never updated).

   In view of this old hardware, updating is blazingly fast compared to
   anything else I know, like Ubuntu or -- _horrors_ -- Win7 (at
   workplace) or even Win10 (on my wife's Lenovo laptop with SSD). It's
   amazing what miserable experience people even _pay_ for! I do wish I
   was better at systems programming, so that I could contribute to
   FreeBSD (or any other BSD; I simply had best experience on my laptops
   so far with FreeBSD, but OpenBSD on gopher.first.ethz.ch or NetBSD on
   sdf.org are of course nice as well).

   .:.