132 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
132 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4361
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Title: HPR4361: On my own time
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4361/hpr4361.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 23:41:11
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4361 from Monday the 21st of April 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, On My Own Time.
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It is hosted by Swift 110 and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, I express my frustrations at people who push their choice of distros
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on to others.
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Hello everybody, this is Swift 110 and I thought I'd go ahead and do this recording today
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because I wanted to clarify how I feel when it comes to asking questions or on the line
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and the kind of answers that are helpful and the kind of answers that may be confusing
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or downright frustrating.
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Oftentimes I'll bring up that I want to do something and rather than give instructions
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on how to make that work instead of possible, it'll be like, well try this or try
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this or try this and to be honest, it drives me nuts.
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A lot of times when I've even posted that I'm about to do something or thinking of something
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I've already looked at the options that are ahead of me and to be honest there's situations
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where that becomes rather tedious, frustrating, stressful because you're trying to pick
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out of so many.
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And in the world of open source, sometimes things are fork and fork and fork instead of
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making the original project better in first place and so there's a plethora of options
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and I often suffer from what is called analysis paralysis where because I have so many options
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I end up getting nothing though.
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And so I'll illustrate by recalling how I came into Linux because I think this is very
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relevant to what we're discussing right now.
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So I first got started with Linux in 2010.
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I was at a bookstore called Barnes & Noble located in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington
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DC and this was in 2010.
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There was a magazine in there, I forget what it was called, but it featured Linux.
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I didn't quite know what it was, I had used it before without realizing that I had a
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Internet cafe, yeah they existed for a period of time and sadly went extinct like the
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dodo but I wish I would have known what Linux was on that particular machine that I was
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using but at last it's gone to history.
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Anyway, when I got the magazine and I went home and ended up installing this just pop
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a CD into my PC at the time which by the way had a 10 gig hard drive and 80 gig hard drive
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as well.
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So yeah, I didn't have the most rock and sock in parts, yeah I did that.
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I just had to work with what I had at the time, it's 2010 so my new needs were extremely
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needed but little did I know that I would be embarking upon a journey that would last
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and last and last, at this point some 15 years congratulations you've won a prize.
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And I find that I'm very happy with Linux in general, so the distribution that I had there
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was just one was Ubuntu, the version that I was using is 9.10.
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The code name was karmic koala.
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I loved the fact that I could get into the world of Ubuntu and because I just popped the
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CD in and I wasn't communicating with other people I didn't have to hear all these flavors
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in my gear if you catch my drift.
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I just had Ubuntu and that was very helpful for me in my early stages especially because
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now I can focus on Ubuntu and not know about and by virtue of that not care about any other
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district, nobody else in my ear saying oh try out, try Manjaro, try Linux Mint, try
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this, try that, try, try, try, try, try, try me, try me, I don't want to hear that, just
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want to get into Linux, Linux, Linux, Linux, OK, get me, that's all I want to do.
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If you throw all these other distributions out because everybody wants you to use their
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favorite distro and you don't take anything and you consider it, they don't take your background
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and consideration, they don't take what you want to do and consideration, it's my distro.
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Once you do use it, by the way I use Arch, people are so pressed and it's not always
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a good thing, it can be overwhelming, overbearing, it can be annoying and all those things that
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aren't conducive to a growing Linux audience and catch what I'm saying.
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So I had Ubuntu and only Ubuntu, I got to know Ubuntu, I used to Ubuntu and keep
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saying it until it gets to point across, I didn't have to worry about the baggage of other
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distributions. I know I'm ramming this point in the place because it's how I do sometimes,
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but I just want to make it clear how I feel and so I stuck with Ubuntu.
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Eventually I learned to develop the distributions and on the Maker Hardware I had which would
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gradually include laptops, all my goodness that opened up a whole new world.
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I'm not going to do that power, but actually I did it anyway, I just didn't take it any further,
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but the thing is I knew of others but I can go into the whole laptop thing, that's
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it's ever recording, let me stay on topic here. The point is I stayed with Ubuntu from
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whatever part of 2020 that I did, then I got started, pretty much until 2012.
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Now one of the early issues I had with Ubuntu was I didn't have internet at home at that time,
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and so I pretty much went to the library, learned how to download the proper codex
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and months later I learned how to install them into my machine and then oh my goodness gracious I
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had Sam, the months of not having it. In fact I had a day of Linux which was Friday's each week
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where I would work within Linux despite not having Sam. You can imagine how annoying that was,
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but yeah it's 11. I stayed with Ubuntu 2012, I learned of the fact that Ubuntu was going to
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actually be changing up their desktop environment, which I was familiar with norm too, I loved it,
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I still love Ubuntu, called me sometime, maybe, but I came across the Mate desktop environment,
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and so that became my new gal, so to speak, and so this thing called Unity,
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yeah Unity, it was not what its namesake was expected to be, if anything it was the polar opposite,
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and I did not like it, in fact trying Unity several times officially I can say I hated it,
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but over years and after several blog posts that illustrated how I felt about Unity,
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I've softened over the years and I appreciate its existence because other people enjoy it,
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and that's something about Linux I love, that there's something for you and there's something for me,
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but if you're not catching so far what I've been putting down, my progression or my use of different
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distributions has been a very organic one, where I'm making decisions based on what I learned
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over time, and not because of peer pressure, or constantly having people screaming in my ear,
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that's annoying to me, I don't like being an egg, so when I make a decision, it needs to be uniquely my
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decision when I decide to make it, plain and simple, and so organically pretty much going from
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Ubuntu to Linux Mint, you know, made it more of an enjoyable experience for me,
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getting involved in Linux and getting more comfortable with it, to the point where I was using it
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every day, to the point where it was on all of my devices, and I wouldn't even use Windows at all,
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so that's beautiful, but sticking with one distro over an extended period of time also allowed me to
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learn how to actually solve problems and not become what is called a distro hopper, if you sometimes
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people hop from place to place, they're like that rabbit and Alice and Wonderland, they're like I'm late,
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I'm late, I'm late, I'm late, I'm late, and it's crazy when you get somebody constantly going,
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I'm late, I'm late, I'm late, you feel me when you're just never happy, it's like chill out, sit down,
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you know, and learn the distro, and so that's what I did, I used to learning and solving problems with
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Linux, and it's been a fantastic voyage as a result, now I kept seeing this guy online, and that's
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it, I'll do that as a separate record, but I ended up going to Solus, and again, not because anybody
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told me to, but because I decided to, and so that's the point I really want to make clear,
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you gotta let people breathe a little bit, we can be zealous about our own particular distros,
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but sometimes you gotta just breathe, one, and then a two, two, and then a three, three,
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then a four, then you gotta breathe, see when you let people breathe, they come to their own conclusions,
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and it allows for a much more rounded experience, especially in the world of Linux,
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where you can be confused by the plethora of distributions that exist, so I just hope that
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this recording can be helpful, I hope that there's those that can relate to what it is that I'm
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talking about, and I don't mean any harm towards anybody, but it's like sometimes people,
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and even outside the world of Linux, they are gung-ho about their particular way of doing things,
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but patience is a beautiful thing, and allowing people to be people, we can give them options,
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it's not always about being right or being wrong, but just giving a person room to make their own
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decisions, and you know, kind of grasp it over time, because people don't always grasp
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over on the same level at the same time, and so it's good to allow that variability to exist.
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I hope you all have a fantastic evening, and I wish you the best, now one thing I want to
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say before I'm done is that I highly suggest that if you have a tech-related topic that you wish
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to share, please follow me and feel free to contribute to Hacker Public Radio,
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I say it this way, don't worry if it's not good enough for anyone else to hear, just record,
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record, record, record, okay, don't feel shy, don't be scared, say what you gotta say, so that we
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can hear your voice, and likely you'll find others that can relate to what it is that you're saying.
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It's a fantastic audience here, this project has actually been around for about 20 years,
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and so we want to keep it going, as long as we have individuals,
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such as yourself, hopefully, let the side contribute to this project, it'll keep going.
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So, I've seen my way out, you guys have a fantastic day, that's up to all of you, bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, as Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself, if you ever thought of recording
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podcast, and click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has
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been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our syncs.net.
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On the Sadois stages, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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