103 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
103 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1320
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Title: HPR1320: How I got into Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1320/hpr1320.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:29:47
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---
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Lets go and see if anyone likes this game.
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Hello, I'm Jay Robb with Two Bees and this is my first HPR episode.
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I'm going to talk about how I get into using Linux and programming.
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In 1999, I was in high school when I took a computer science class.
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It was also the choice of choosing between basic or Pascal.
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The basic was for regular and then the Pascal was the honors class.
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It was all in the same class but they had two separate courses I guess you'd say.
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So that was a lot of fun. I did the Pascal.
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I don't think I've used its sense but it was a lot of fun.
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The professor was awesome. His name was Mr. Fix.
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He was a really cool guy. I also taught the calculus and math classes and that kind of thing.
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It was really great, really opened my eyes into programming.
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He also used Linux and he had a computer there in the classroom that was dold booting.
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I remember he showed us and told us about it a little bit at the time.
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But I didn't know what Linux was back then. He never heard of it.
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Never really been exposed to it.
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So a little while after that I had a friend who was a little younger than me
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but he was good friends with my group of friends and related him some kind of way to some of the guys.
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He told me about Linux and said, hey, here's this thing called Red Hat.
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I can't remember the version but it was around 99.
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So it was probably version 4. I don't know.
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He gave me some CDs and I installed it and thought it was really cool.
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It was free and still at that point didn't know anything about free software.
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There was just a free operating system that was not Windows and that was exciting in itself.
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So then I used that for a while dold booting with Windows, whatever the version was at the time.
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Kind of went back and forth using it and using Windows and using Linux.
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And then when Ubuntu came out, another friend said, told me, you know, here's another Linux that has distribution that's easy to use.
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They take some of the stuff that's kind of a pain in the ass and smooth it over so that you can do most normal things that people do.
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I was probably in university around this time and we were using Unix file systems in the computer science department.
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So that was cool. So you know, I was thinking Linux is great at this point.
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So I went and tried that out. It was great and all that.
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I used that for a little while and kind of got bored.
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And at that point I was kind of hooked. I was not using Windows anymore.
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It was probably around 02 or so.
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So I went through, I went to distrowatch.com and started going through the list of all the distributions.
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I was just trying them out, I tried them out for a few weeks or a month or until I decided I didn't like it or it got on my nerves.
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Or anything like that. So I used it.
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Arch Linux for a really long time. I liked it a lot.
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And probably would have stuck with it.
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I like the rolling release cycle and a lot of stuff about it.
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Except my computer that I was using at that time had a loose heat sink on the north bridge.
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And it kind of got knocked a little looser when I installed a larger video card or something.
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And so it kind of came loose. It just fried the motherboard and it died.
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And then at that point I was just too lazy to go back and reinstall Arch.
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It's kind of time consuming and I just didn't really want to do that.
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So I used a few others.
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Some of my favorites were Sabayon.
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That's how you say it actually.
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I used Fedora for a while, Debian.
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I kind of tend to keep coming back to Debian-based distros.
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And I used Debian for a long time.
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Running unstable or testing.
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And then now at some point I've kind of settled in the last year.
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So I'm Linux Mint, Debian Edition, which is based off the testing branch of Debian.
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And it's got some of the nicer things.
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Like it runs Cinnamon, which is awesome.
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Usually it's got some bugs that I've noticed.
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Doc Bar will disappear occasionally and I'll have to log out and log in.
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It comes back.
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It's kind of irritating, but it's overall still my favorite.
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I like it better than number three.
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And slightly better than XFC.
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Much better than KDE.
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I've never got a fan of KDE.
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But a lot of people like it.
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So I'd have to say the reason I got into Linux is because of most of the two people.
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My computer science professor, Mr. Fix, in high school.
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And then my friend, Ryan, who really kind of showed me the way.
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I'll say, speaking of Ryan, he passed away in 2009, which is sad.
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But he also got me into web development and PHP and my SQL.
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And we had kind of a friendly rivalry there for a long time in the early 2000s,
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designing websites and databases and forums and search engines and all these kind of things online.
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He actually called me his arch-nemesis, which was kind of strange.
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But he was a strange person and we had a lot of fun doing all these things.
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And using the things that I was doing at that time, PHP and my SQL,
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that actually led me more into what I wound up doing as a career and things designing databases
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and writing it all software.
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Thankfully not with PHP or my SQL, which perfectly happy not to use either of those again,
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I don't have to, but that opened a lot of doors for me and coming out of high school
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and doing that around that early time period was really great.
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Getting into the open software and free software was probably one of the best things for me.
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So I love Linux and I'm really glad I got into it.
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And actually I kind of wish I'd gotten into it sooner.
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But that's my story and this is, I guess that'll conclude my first HPR episode.
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Thanks for listening.
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You have been listening to HackerPublic Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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