Allright the install went well. Then rebooting was good enough. I didn't want X to star by default, as I like to stay in the console at first and then startx only if needed. A strange thing happened in X, the brightness of the screen dimmed when it started. So I tried xbacklight -set 100 which didn't work. I had to install intel_backlight from some random github place, which still didn't work. I then troubleshoot to realized that I needed my kernel to let me change a file that was already open. WTF? So I had to create a file in /etc/ sysctl.conf and add the line machdep.allowaperture=3 to change it from 0 to 3 so that then, intel_backlight was able to bring the brighness to a normal value. Quite the trip already. I though cwm was the default window manager on openBSD but it wasn't install, nor I could pkg_add it? Maybe I'm not looking in the right place? So I ended up installing i3 window manager. At first I wanted an openBSD as close to the core, system, but then realized that I'll probably have to sweat it to make it all workable for me so, might as weel create a comfortable UI. I copied my .i3/confing file and I was back to a decent Xorg experience. I installed my tools and the next step is to see if I can access my home directory from linux, which is on ext4 file system. If I can mount that in my openBSD, I'll be very close to a working machine. So far so good, we'll see how far I get with an openBSD as a work computer!