Thanks for your thoughts on making the move from Linux to BSD.  I'm not making 
the move because I don't like Linux.  Instead, I want to learn BSD.  I find 
that the best way to familiarize myself with a distro is to adopt it as my main 
distro (for web browsing, email, word processing, etc.).  But the challenge of 
BSD have so far proven too much for me.  It would take too long to configure 
FreeBSD to my liking.  I couldn't figure out what to enter in GRUB to 
multi-boot Linux and BSD.  I tried PC-BSD, GhostBSD, and DragonflyBSD in 
VirtualBox.  I've found PC-BSD agonizingly slow to install and operate, and KDE 
didn't even boot up when I logged in.  GhostBSD has too many things that don't 
work, such as the keyboard on my laptop and my Internet connection on my 
desktop.  DragonflyBSD didn't boot up in Virtualbox.

I recommend Linux Mint as a first Linux distro.  It's user-friendly, 
well-established, widely used, includes codecs/drivers that Ubuntu doesn't, and 
has a Windows-like user interface.  For those with older computers, I recommend 
Puppy Linux or antiX Linux as a first distro.  I'm looking for the analogous 
choice in the BSD world.

So what do you recommend as my first desktop BSD distro?  What desktop BSD 
distro is so easy to use that even Paris Hilton can handle it?

Please keep in mind that I have a slow Internet connection, and these BSD 
distros are ENORMOUS.  It took some 12-14 hours to download PC-BSD.

-- 
Jason Hsu <[email protected]>
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