I have spent a bit more time with Haiku and thought I might share a few more of my experiences. I have confirmed that the headphone jack and speakers both work out of the box with haiku and my Thinkpad X230. As a part of the testing I ported over a scraper I wrote a while ago for... a popular music website, and downloaded some tunes to try out (mostly solo piano stuff in either a jazz or ambient vein). I then needed something to play the MP3s with. I tried out the media player that comes with Haiku: "MediaPlayer". This application had worked well for playing a video downlaoded with youtube-dl as a test. When I tried to play an MP3 the screen went white accross large bits of it with garbled text. Nothing responded to commands, clicks, etc (including various attempts to send signals to kill or interrup). I had to restart the system. In the end this suited me fine because I prefered cmus anyway. So I ran: `pkgman install cmus` and a few moments later I had it up and running. I added the albums I got and hit enter to start playing one. It palyed, but there were lots of pops, artifacts, and glitches. I tried making adjustments to buffer size and sample rate to no avail. Eventually I found a bit about this issue on the Haiku message boards. It seems to be a problem with the udnerlying driver and not in the cmus port itself. The driver has not been fixed, so that was a bummer. I then tried the only other major audio player I could find in the repo at a quick glance: Clementine. Clementine has had no problems playing music. However, I find this player to be absolutely horrid. It will not save my settings and it has so much GUI junk that just isnt needed. It makes me miss WinAmp a lot, lol. I am hopeful that the driver that cmus uses will eventually get a patch and I can go back to my prefered audio player. All that said: audio mostly works well as far as hardware goes, though there remain some software issues. I cannot recall if I talked about Go in my last post about Haiku so I'll keep this brief: Go 1.4 is ported. The idea being that they could use that to bootstrap 1.5, which can then bootstrap later versions. However, no one has gotten 1.5 to build... so we still only have ancient Go. Which is a big bummer for me, but is having the effect of pushing me more toward C (and due to Haiku possibly a little bit of c++... but I am naturally resistant to oop as a code style, so I will likely stick mostly to C and just use c++ when I need to interact with the Haiku GUI apis). The terminal, as I have written about prior, continues to be a less than stellar experience. I get the impression from the message boards that the terminal is not the way most of the devs like to experience computers and instead work very hard on their GUI stuff, which I am mostly fine with... but I do wish the terminal functioned better. It seems to be glitchy, have less than optimal unicode support (it supports utf-8, but I get a lot of characters not displaying or not displaying correctly... this could be font related, but I am using a font I know to have the characters I am having issues with so...). My battery life has been ok. Not stellar, but ok. I have not been able to figure out a way to attach screen bright- ness to any key control of any kind and it _always_ starts the system at full brightness. So I have to go into the "screen" preferences and lower it. Doing so requires usage of a GUI application that requires navigating multiple menus. It would be nice if, lacking any key bindings, I could make the adjustment from the terminal. The WiFi has remained pretty good. It seems to shit the bed on maybe one out of every five boots. However, I can usually just go into my preferences and disable the card for a moment and then restart it and log into my network and I am good to go, so this is not a major problem. The keyboard back- lighting as well as the 'ThinkLight' work well and are the only Fn key combo (with spacebar) that works reliably on the system at present. Having never owned a Thinkpad before this one, I am surprised to find that I much prefer the ThinkLight to keyboard backlighting. I am also now so used to the trackpoint that it feels weird to go back to my XPS and use the touchpad. I have been enjoying this system as a second computer for listening to music and phlogging, but have generally avoided coding on it. The exceptions being porting over the aforeme- ntioned scraper and a quick dice rolling app I coded up in C while playing Shadowrun with friends earlier (I got tired of rolling 18 actual dice and counting up successes and failures and thought typing: `roll [# of sides] [# of dice]` was much easier. Both of those are quick and simple projects though. While perusing their message baords it seems that most of the devs prefer large IDEs and many want to get Node and/or C# ported over to Haiku... all of those things are very unappealing to me. I do not know that I am a good fit with this community (I prefer Vim or my own editor, Hermes, for writing code and really dislike JS and Microsoft stack). In the end I think I would still prefer to get a BSD running with dwm/dmenu and call it a day. That said, trying to get X running w/ FreeBSD was such a pain that I am in no rush to return to those efforts. This is a secondary system for me that largely exists to test and try things out, so it is fine for it to be a less productive system for a bit. I wonder if I would have better luck with either OpenBSD or NetBSD. As mentioned before, GhostBSD installed well for me, but was way bigger and bulkier than I want. But it at least shows that the systems _can_ run on my laptop.