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	<title>Comments on: External USB drive failure and recovery</title>
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	<description>Author and IT Consultant since 1986</description>
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		<title>By: Joe Poniatowski &#187; Blog Archive &#187; From SUSE Linux 10.0 to FreeBSD 7.0 Migration - Part 0 (Intro)</title>
		<link>http://www.1003concepts.com/jp/tech/32/comment-page-1#comment-256</link>
		<dc:creator>Joe Poniatowski &#187; Blog Archive &#187; From SUSE Linux 10.0 to FreeBSD 7.0 Migration - Part 0 (Intro)</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Jul 2008 19:44:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] On some forum (can&#8217;t recall where), someone mentioned FreeBSD as a viable option for old, slow hardware, so I decided to try it out on the kids&#8217; PC. After some tweaking of the device hints to get it to use the old NIC, it worked great. Performance is acceptable for the hardware (300 mhz Pentium II), and it runs most Linux software in addition to native FreeBSD code. After some more online research about the relative strengths and weaknesses of FreeBSD vs. other BSDs vs. Linux, I decided to reload the server with FreeBSD. This server is built on a DELL Dimensions platform, with a 2 Gigahertz Intel processor and 256 Meg of memory. It has 2 internal hard drives, a 30 Gig Maxtor 6E030L0, and a 160 Gig Seagate ST3160215A (which came out of a failed external USB SimTech drive. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] On some forum (can&#8217;t recall where), someone mentioned FreeBSD as a viable option for old, slow hardware, so I decided to try it out on the kids&#8217; PC. After some tweaking of the device hints to get it to use the old NIC, it worked great. Performance is acceptable for the hardware (300 mhz Pentium II), and it runs most Linux software in addition to native FreeBSD code. After some more online research about the relative strengths and weaknesses of FreeBSD vs. other BSDs vs. Linux, I decided to reload the server with FreeBSD. This server is built on a DELL Dimensions platform, with a 2 Gigahertz Intel processor and 256 Meg of memory. It has 2 internal hard drives, a 30 Gig Maxtor 6E030L0, and a 160 Gig Seagate ST3160215A (which came out of a failed external USB SimTech drive. [...]</p>
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