212 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
212 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 877
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Title: HPR0877: Welcome Frank Bell
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0877/hpr0877.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 03:56:06
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---
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Hello, my name is Frank Bell, and this is my first submission to hacker public radio.
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I've been considering making a submission for some time, and after listening to Poké's
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plea on the Linux link tech show today, I decided it was time for me to get off my
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rear end and get to work.
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One of the things that has been holding me back is a puzzlement as to what subjects I
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might be competent enough to talk about it to the HPR community.
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But I have a couple of ideas now in the back of my head, and I decided to get the ball rolling
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by describing how I got started with Linux about six and a half years ago.
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A little bit about myself first, as a trade, I write and design training courses, training
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manuals.
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I have done some user manuals both for technical topics such as computer use and non-technical
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topics such as customer service, problem solving, all kinds of things over the course of my
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30 plus years as a trainer.
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My first encounter with hands-on computing was about the time computers were starting
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to appear in the workplace, and those days computers generally appeared first on the
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secretary's desk because most managers viewed them as glorified typewriters being used
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to produce documents.
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I managed to get my hand on a surplus 8086, a very rare bird, and get permission to
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put it on my desk where I played with it and used it to experiment, learn my way around
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the DOS command line, and do a little elementary stuff.
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Nothing so sophisticated is coding, I've always been a user, never a coder, but it was
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my introduction, and I quite enjoyed it.
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I think that box was running DOS 3.3.
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By the way, this was about the time the term keyboarding came into the language.
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Up until then it was called typing.
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However, typing was viewed as women's work, and then as women's liberation proceeded
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a little, it became viewed as underlings' work, but it was definitely beneath the job
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skills of a manager.
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So some enterprising consultant came up with the term keyboarding, and suddenly it became
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okay for managers to take typing classes as long as they did not call it typing.
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I took typing when I was in high school.
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My children took keyboarding, and I have observed one difference between those who take
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typing and those who take keyboarding.
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The people who took typing can type.
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The people who took keyboarding by and large cannot.
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Anyway, that's neither here nor there.
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My first home computer was a RadioShack Tandy 386 with DOS.
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I think it was DOS 6 and Windows 3.1.
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In those days, the computer booted to the DOS command line.
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You could either run programs and DOS, or if you wanted to do something with a Windows
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program, you would type in the command WIN and start the Windows 3.1 interface.
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When you were done, you could exit Windows and go back to doing computing on the DOS command
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line.
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Within two weeks, I was deep inside the RadioShack Manual for this machine, and in those days,
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RadioShack wrote really good manuals.
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Optimizing the AutoWix Xbat and the Config Suspiles teak a little bit more RAM available
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under 640K, so I could run slightly bronier programs than otherwise.
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I won't try to explain what that meant, but the DOSY old timers will certainly understand
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where I was headed.
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I wasn't afraid to tinker with the darn things.
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When I got that, that was the family computer for a number of years.
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I didn't start with Linux for quite a while.
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I had heard about it, but I didn't want to take a chance on breaking the only family
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computer, and I didn't want to take a chance on breaking my own personal laptop because
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I needed that to do work-related stuff, and the place where I was working at the time
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was a Windows shop.
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It was about 2005.
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I had a colleague who had run a business out of his garage making granny computers.
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He would buy surplus computers from the IS department at his White's Workplace, which
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was a local university, load them with Windows under the existing license that was attached
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to the bottom of these computers, and sell them for $50.
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Sell them primarily to grandparents who wanted to keep up with their grandchildren or
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parents who wanted to keep up with their grown children, hence the term granny computers.
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He decided that business was taking too much of his time and closed it up, and gave
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me three computers.
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One was a gateway, it was turned out to be junk, it was beyond saving, and he gave me two
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IBM PC 300.
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Now these were original Pentium, Pentium 2 had not even been dreamed up when these computers
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rolled off the assembly line.
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300 megahertz computers, and he gave me three hard drives of 8 gigabytes each.
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So now that I had a computer that I could devote to learning Linux, two computers, in fact,
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I had to pick what kind of Linux was I going to start with.
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Before I went any farther, I took a second look at that I want to go down this Linux road.
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I did what many people did in those days, I downloaded NOPEX, that's KNO, PPI, X, if
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you're not familiar with it, Google it, and made a bootable CD, and they are sending
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it work one day when the tech support calls were slow, I booted into NOPEX, and I decided
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I like this, I want more of this, then I began to cast about for a full distro to install.
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I can't remember which one I tried first, I think it was either PPI or a damn small
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Linux, but I couldn't get it to work.
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And through some series of decision making, which is lost in my memory somewhere, way
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back there, and not to be retrieved, I ended up with a set of slackware CDs that I burned
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on my CD burner.
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So I sat down to install slackware.
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Many people will say that slackware is difficult to install, it really isn't except for one
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thing.
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Slackware does not hold your hand in the installation process and offer to partition the hard drive
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for you, it expects you to partition your own hard drive.
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One who is not partitioned to hard drive and formatted is immediately out of his depth,
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and that frankly is the case with most computer users these days.
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It wasn't so much true back then, but certainly it is true today that most computer users
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have never installed an operating system and find the prospect of doing so intimidating.
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And even more intimidating when they have to partition the hard drive and can't find
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the C drive anywhere to work with.
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Fortunately, I had a lot of experience installing software.
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At the time I was working for a company that manufactured high-end security hardware,
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and the accompanying software to run in a Windows NT 2000 domain environment.
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I had lots of experience formatting Windows.
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As the trainer, I had to install the software on my various training machines, update them
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when new versions came out, sometimes because I was also part of support, I would be installing
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software for our customers to use, installing Windows on bare metal.
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So the prospect of formatting a hard drive was not new or strange to me.
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However, when I fired up Linux FDISC, that was new and strange to me.
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So I tried CFDISC, which is also included on the Slackware installation media.
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That I could figure out fairly quickly.
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I probably created and deleted and created and deleted six or seven partitioning schemes
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before I felt satisfied with what I had and wrote the partitions to the disk.
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Then I proceeded with the installation.
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I think that first day, that first Saturday morning sitting there in the guest room,
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I installed Slackware three times.
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At no time did I blame Slackware for having to redo it.
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For one thing, I knew enough about installing operating systems to know that if you mess it up,
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you can always just do it again.
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You haven't heard anything.
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And as I installed it the second and third time, I realized that the things I had done
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that I was dissatisfied with were the result of my own failure to read the stinking directions.
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It was all there I just needed to keep reading.
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Third time, I was happy with what I had.
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And in fact, I used that particular software load with changes.
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I'll tell you about later for a number of years.
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So now I had this Slackware machine.
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What was the first thing I was going to do?
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I was going to install an antivirus.
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I had at that time the practice of never putting any machine on the internet without an antivirus
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unless it was to get an antivirus.
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Now I know that people argue you don't need an antivirus on Linux.
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Well, yeah, the horse is still a barn because Linux has a much better security model than Windows.
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Indeed, whenever I see that Windows is improving its security, it appears to me they're trying
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to put another lock on what is essentially a screen door.
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I'm aware, especially now, six and a half years later of the differences between the two security
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models, but I guarantee you this.
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When there is a Linux virus in the wild, I'm going to read about it.
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I'm not going to live it.
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Anyway, I went out to get F-ProP, which at the time I was using on my Windows machines,
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I quite liked, and they had free for Linux.
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I went to install it by running the script they provided for installation and it promptly
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threw an error message.
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I had some dependencies I needed to fulfill.
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F-ProP suggested C-Man, C-Pan, Charlie, Papa, Alpha, November for details.
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So I typed Man C-Pan in on the command line and was immediately thoroughly confused.
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But I managed to model through and was able to use C-Pan to install the dependencies.
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And this was truly an aha moment.
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I'm sitting there at a computer at the command line.
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Those of you who know Slackware know that it boots by default to the command line, not
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to a graphical display manager.
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Watching text fly across the screen as my computer reaches out to a server somewhere
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out there in the internet and install software directly.
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And I'm thinking, yes, this is really cool, more like this.
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Eventually that I got that done, I also wanted a firewall.
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I was far too new to know anything about IP tables, so I went hunting around and found
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a piece of software called Firestarter, which I have since learned is basically a front-end
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for IP table.
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At the time Slackware still came with GNOME, so all the libraries that Firestarter needed
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were present, and Firestarter became the first program that I compiled from sources for
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installing on a Linux computer.
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And for quite a while, my primary mode of installing software was thought slash configure,
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make, and make install.
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It was no big deal to me, though sometimes it did mean quite a long coffee break.
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So now I had this computer set up, I've got my user name, there's the root user, the
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graphical interface, which was KDE3-something, I think 3.5 or 3.6 back in those days, which
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I actually quite liked, and what was I going to do with it?
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And I realized I didn't know what to do with it.
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I'll come back to that.
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I had this other computer here, Blink, bare metal, as people like to say, and I thought
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of something I could do with that, I called up my daughter, who was newly graduated, working
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her first job as a school teacher, several states away, and asked her if she had a computer.
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I did not think she did, I confirmed she did not, so I asked her if she wanted one.
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And she said, certainly, so I installed Slackware, still 10.0 on that machine, set it up,
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write her up a page of instructions, and ship this door, and she used that for a number
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of years.
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And you know what?
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She didn't call me with a single support question, and this is the example I always use
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when people try to tell me that Linux is difficult.
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No, it's not, it is different, it is not difficult.
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In fact, she may still have the computer the last time I saw her in person, now she lives
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on the other side of the country, but the last time I saw her in person, she still had
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the computer, but they weren't using it because her husband and her wanted a computer where
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they could do stuff with video, and that old Pentium 300 chip could not do video, it could
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do audio, but it could not do video at all, video with just too much for it.
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Well, there I was with a computer, and no use for it, other than to play with it.
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And frankly, I have never learned much when I was just playing with something.
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I need to have a purpose.
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Even if the purpose is completely unimportant to anyone else, I still need to have some
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direction, or I just sit there and stare at whatever it is.
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Just like I like to build stuff out of wood.
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I like to build bookcases and things like that, but I won't build them just to build them.
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If I need a bookcase, I'll build a bookcase, but I'm not going to build a bookcase and
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then go try and sell it down at the flea market or something like that, that just doesn't
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interest me.
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I did find a purpose for this computer, about a month and a half later on a business trip
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to Chicago, and I will tell you that story, and also what things I learned from my initial
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introduction to Linux in the next installment.
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Thank you very much, I'll be talking at you again.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio, does our.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dark Pound and the International Computer
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Club.
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