142 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
142 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1302
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Title: HPR1302: How I Got to Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1302/hpr1302.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:11:53
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---
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.
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I've heard the calls for episodes from HPR, so I'm going to give this a try.
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This is my first attempt and I'm going to talk about how I got into Linux.
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I'm using the handle executor and first I'll tell you a little bit about my computer background.
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I started in computers on an IBM mainframe back in 1968.
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I had the chance to use a 36075 which in the day was a really remarkable machine.
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I was very lucky because in our high school we had a teacher who had an in with a professor
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at the local university where the computer was.
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We got to go to the computer center, make up our own decks, punching in those cards,
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then we would haul them into the reader room, the reader had a room and the cards would
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be read, output we would then receive.
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It was on fan paper.
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That's where I learned code.
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Now I then went out of high school into university at that university and studied there for
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about a year in that program.
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However, the wise people of that university told us all that there would be no jobs.
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The market they said was completely saturated to nobody would buy any more mainframes.
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There would be no jobs.
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I thought well they're the experts so I changed my major and ended up working in a totally
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different field for many years.
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I still liked computer stuff so as much as I could I would read about them and follow
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their development.
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It was many years later around 1989 when I bought my first PC which was an IBM clone.
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It struck me as almost the machine that we were trying to design back in the day in 1968.
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We would talk about what we'd like but could we have it home.
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Although our real aim was the laptop.
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The laptop was some years in the future at that point though.
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I started using DOS and I stuck with it quite some time until computers started to come
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in at the office.
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This was by the mid-90s.
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I was then using a laptop to Shiba.
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It was running on Windows.
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I never got into Macs.
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I just didn't at first.
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The PC's everyone was using it.
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Work were all Windows and I transitioned from DOS into Windows.
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I was not happy.
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For many years though I continued struggling with Windows and using it at work and at home.
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In 2007 I finally met someone who was a red hat certified instructor I think.
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He kept trying to get me to use Linux.
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At first I wasn't interested but when he explained about all the language options in it was
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free and he gave me a CD to try it out.
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Welcome on.
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It was free.
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I tried it.
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The version that I got from him was Ubuntu and I think it was feisty fun.
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In any event I started using that and discovered very quickly that it would be helpful to understand
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the coding for the command line.
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I went into Unix and Linux sites and taught myself a certain amount.
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I then bought my own computers, the laptops I had been using some work about my own.
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It had a legal windows system on it and I you booted it into Ubuntu.
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By this time we're up to G and H. I don't remember what those were but they got a lot
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better and a lot easier to use.
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One morning I came out and saw that my system was open and running.
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I was quite surprised because I shut everything down.
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Coming from the days when RAM was something like 5 or 6 megabytes I religiously shut windows
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and closed things down to maximize the use of the computer.
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It took me a little while but I figured out that what had happened is that although I
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had my windows system locked down every way I could think of and every way my friends
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could think of, he had still opened up.
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So what had happened was there was some attempt to boot into my windows system and I'm
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assuming make alterations.
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Now I'm thinking this was windows itself that was trying to do it and that I had effectively
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been monitored in some fashion and now there was some effort made to get at my system.
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I was extremely upset and in a rage I wiped the entire machine clean because the suspected
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maybe something was planted and I booted up with Ubuntu only.
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I stayed with Ubuntu only then for some years the various versions came and went.
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I would install and use them and I actually have liked the Ubuntu system.
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Not until Unity.
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When Unity came in and I was forced to upgrade my system I was very upset.
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Instead of being able to use the system that I was familiar with and which I had customized
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to suit myself I was being forced to use this new layer.
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I tend to help out friends who think I know a lot about computers which gives you an
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idea of how little they know and I would have to work with Unity or such on their systems.
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So gradually I was forced into that, didn't care for it, then Ubuntu went into partnership
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with Amazon and before that system came out I decided I'd had enough.
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What I do now is work in Linux Mint.
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I know huge change right, I mean it's practically identical but it doesn't have the annoying
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features.
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I have customized Mint, I'm very pleased with the way it's running and I am using Audacity
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now on Mint.
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It seems to be working really well.
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We'll see.
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I did stay with pure Ubuntu machines for a very long time even though I got back into
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gaming.
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The problem back in the day was that Steam wouldn't run on the Ubuntu system unless you
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really tweak the daylight set of one.
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I got pretty good at it and I could get most of my Steam games to run even the full screen
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large demanding ones.
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I had another Toshiba with a heavy duty processor, RAM and so forth and it seemed to be able
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to handle the processor.
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I liked it well enough, except I have to admit it was pretty buggy.
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It would not always run properly, sometimes games were messed up and so on.
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So when I bought my current laptop I decided I would get a legal window system again and
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then switch to do a boot.
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When I first did that I was still in Ubuntu.
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I discovered Mint and decided I would triple boot, I know, on suicidal.
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I ran a triple boot machine for quite a while, six months, something like that.
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It worked pretty well actually, but as the months passed I realized there was almost never
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opening Ubuntu and I was basically offering out Mint.
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Because I had the Windows system on the machine I could play Steam out of Windows.
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This I found very satisfactory and I continued to use the system with the dual boot, I dropped
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the triple and Windows regains Mint for everything else.
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Another thing I did was swap out one of the 500 GB drives, took the spin disk out and
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put in an SSD.
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I run Windows on that side and I must say the gaming is wonderful.
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However, for everything else that I do I run out of Linux Mint and I am happy with
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that system.
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I use it for preparing all my documents, PowerPoints, audio, everything for work.
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I take it into work, everything runs well.
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The bottom line is that for reality and day-to-day functioning I felt now function completely
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in Linux.
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For gaming I have to admit it's awfully nice to run the games on an SSD drive.
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So that's about it for me and working with Linux.
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I hope that this show isn't too bad and that others will be encouraged to go ahead and
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give it a try.
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This really isn't a tough system to use and I just saw the HPR program about recording
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using a Dacity.
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I found it very helpful and as you can hear I actually managed to record something.
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If more people don't record additional programs for HPR then I may try a second program and
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I think once in my bag would be a fun one.
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Encourage people to try this, it's really not that hard, thanks for listening.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever consider recording a podcast then visit our website to find out how easy
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicom computer
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cloud.
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needs.
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