Initial commit: HPR Knowledge Base MCP Server
- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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hpr_transcripts/hpr0717.txt
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Episode: 717
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Title: HPR0717: My Switch from Windows to Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0717/hpr0717.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:26:46
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---
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How much?
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Hi, this is Jason William, this is my first podcast on Hacker Public Radio, really my first
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podcast ever.
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And I really like the concept behind Hacker Public Radio, I think it's a great idea and
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I just wanted to contribute to it and hopefully maybe at some point become a regular contributor.
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This first podcast is going to be one that I think most people give, a lot of people give
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anyway as their first podcast on Hacker Public Radio and that's my switch from Windows
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to Linux.
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And it's a story that's similar probably to most people, just like most people, the decision
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to switch wasn't me overnight, I didn't wake up one day and said, hmm, let me just try
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Linux.
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It was really a decision to span many years and just little by little the decision to switch
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to Linux became strong and strong and so eventually I just made the switch.
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I think my first exposure to Linux was an ancient laptop that my brother got from a friend
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of the family and it wasn't being used for anything, it was, I don't even know if you
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can call this a laptop, it was maybe a predecessor to laptops today.
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It had a really tiny screen, the screen was really the size of the average keyboard and
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the length and width were about the same size as the keyboard and it flipped up like a laptop.
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But the screen was, you know, green screen, it wasn't a color screen at all, you know,
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that black background with the green characters up front and there was no GUI, it was just
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all command line and that was the first Linux PCI I think I'd ever seen and I remember
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just kind of learning little things here and there how to navigate through the file system.
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I remember I stumbled upon helping and info and I remember stumbling across CAD and what
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I was doing was basically just going through the operating system and when I saw a file
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that looked interesting, I would try to execute it and see what happened, sometimes there
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were disastrous results and I had to restart the computer, sometimes I got something interesting
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and then other times I got nothing and if I didn't get anything then I would try to
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print that command, you know, CAD and whatever the command was to see if I got some kind
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of information to the screen and sometimes that was disastrous, the screen just filled
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up with garble and I would have to restart the PC but that's really where I started off
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with Linux and I had learned a few things, at the time we had a Commodore 64 in the house
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and so I had done a lot of programming on that, I learned basic and I had created a whole
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lot of little small applications and I really while I was poking around on that Linux laptop,
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I was really trying to see if there was a way that I could do the same kind of programming
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that I did on the Commodore 64 if I could apply those same skills to the Linux box and
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ended up being a pretty futile task and I guess most people know if you don't have a good
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background with bash rifting or shell scripting, you're really not going to be able to do much
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with the command line on a Linux computer and so I left that experience thinking that was pretty
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a pretty big waste of time, Linux really doesn't have anything that I could use because I was
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really trying to do basic programming on a Linux computer and it just wasn't working.
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I spent the next several years all the way up into adulthood working primarily with Windows PCs,
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I enlisted into the military and they almost exclusively use Windows. Although there were a few
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instances where I got the opportunity to mess around with Linux a little bit our Unix
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based systems, there was actually a course that I had to attend that basically taught the basics
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of Unix, all the basic commands and just the file system and how things work and that was for
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a communication system that was kind of new and it used Unix as its base. There was another
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command that I was at that used another, I think it was a Solaris spark maybe I think is the name
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that rings the bell, I'm not sure if that's what it was or not but it was a spark PC I think and
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it was at ran Unix and it was also to do some communications type stuff. So other than those obscure
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opportunities that I had then in the military to work with Linux the rest of the time was pretty
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much all Windows. I remember seeing Windows 3.1 in the military, we had these old scene I think there
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was Z110 computers huge even for that time they seemed like they were huge and I believe if I'm
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not mistaken they were running Windows 3.1. I remember seeing Windows NT come around 95, 98 XP,
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the military went through that whole thing with Windows but during that whole time I didn't have
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much exposure at all to Linux it was pretty much Windows the whole time and you know I was really
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never the type of person to kind of run with the crowd I always was trying to see what else was
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out there and I always was kind of like techy by nature and so though everybody was messed around
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with Windows I was always looking to see what else was out there what's something that's different
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that most people aren't using and every once in a while running to somebody that was using some
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other OS I remember one gentleman I ran into he was using OS 10 which I believe was a Mac Mac
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attached operating system one of the first ones maybe I don't know and it was very impressive
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I like the way it looked it was definitely different than what Windows was doing and then there
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were several Linux versions that I had tried out my brother I remember him giving me a call one day
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and telling me about this Linux distribution that ran off of a CD and at that time that was
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unheard up to me anyway it was called Kanapik and I'm sure most people are familiar with that
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and I was amazed at the fact that you could burn this thing onto a CD hop it in your computer
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boot up and and run Linux off of the CD I thought that was amazing I remember at some job fair
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I was at I think it was called Turbo Linux these people were handing out CDs with Turbo Linux
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I remember installing that on a PC and it wasn't not Turbo on a PC that I was using by any stretch
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of imagination it was very very very slow but that was another one I remember trying out Red Hat
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from somewhere I don't know where I got it from but I remember trying Red Hat out as well
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and so you know even though I was surrounded by Windows every once in a while would take a look at
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what other operating systems and it was mostly Linux that I was trying to see what they had
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had to offer but I never really stuck with Linux and really the reason I think was because
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everybody else that I knew and everybody else that I was working with was using Windows and then
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even those times when I did try out Linux there was no way to integrate the work I was doing
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in Linux with the work that I had to do with Windows there was not much compatibility
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there at least that I could find and so it became more of a headache to use Linux because there
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was there was no way to take the stuff that I had done in Linux and use it anywhere except for
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the PC that I had at home so I really sort of abandoned Linux because of that that compatibility
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issue several several years after this I think I was about a year away from retiring from
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that from the military I think there was two computers in the house there was a desktop
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and a laptop all of them had XP on it and I was doing a lot of audio editing work for our church
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on the desktop and at this time that desktop had seemed to run slower and slower and slower as
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many of us know Windows PCs tend to do and I remember one day in particular that I went to the
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desktop and started up to do some some audio editing and I saw this little pop-up come up on
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the screen and I was really kind of used to seeing little pop-ups pop-up all the time that I really
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wanted to show what they were for and just like I had done before I just hit cancel and didn't
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really think anything of it I was accustomed to that Windows computer doing things like that that
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I wasn't sure why it was doing or what it was going for just hit cancel and move on but this
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time was a little different after I clicked on cancel my explorer internet explorer application
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pop-up and went right to a webpage that was selling antivirus software now I was no dummy I
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realized that something terrible just happened that was pretty sure it was a virus the pop-up was
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kind of like my first warning in the fact that this this explorer when his internet page popped up
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asking me to buy antivirus software was my sure enough clue that I probably had a virus on
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the computer and that really you know scarred me as far as my using Windows I became very jaded
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because I didn't think that was something that should just happen so easily without me knowing
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and there might have been other indicators that I might have caught if I was you know more
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knowledgeable about the subject but it just really caught me off guard and so I you know for the rest
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of the time while I had that Windows computer I was constantly paranoid that there was going to be
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a virus on there or some guy in Timbuk 2 was hacking into my computer and setting out spam
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mail to all my friends you know and everybody in the rest of the world right from my computer and I
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was you know sort of convincing myself that that was the reason why my computer was going so slow
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and so uh you know this was all really happening around the time that Vista was coming out
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and I read many reviews about Vista how awful some people's experience was and so I really
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decided to to skip Vista I didn't want to mess with it because I though views I heard were so
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negative and so those two things together really started me thinking if you know asking the
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question if Linux really had any solutions to offer for these little problems I was seeing one
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that Windows had produced garbage in many people's and many people's opinion with Vista and the fact
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that I felt like my computer was being overrun by viruses and I was having not a whole lot of
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luck controlling it and so I stuck with XP through the whole Vista debacle and I was constantly
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trying to squeeze you know more and more life out of my PC seemed like it was getting to the point
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where it was really almost unusably slow and so I was constantly trying to remove files and
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clean this up and do this and do that and none of it really was working the PC was slowly getting
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more and more unusable and Vista was on its way out and Windows 7 was now on its way in and I learned
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some things about Windows 7 that really were the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back
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the first thing I think was that there was three or four maybe more different flavors of Windows 7
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and they all had different pricing and to me that really sort of irritated me because it was saying
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to me that Windows was not a Microsoft wasn't really interested in putting out their best product
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they were interested in making money and if they can make it with a lesser product than they
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would do it if they can make it with a better product they could do it and that sort of irritated me
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I think there was a home version for about fifty dollars and I think there was a professional version
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for I think it was ninety nine dollars at the time and you know with my current satisfaction level
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with Windows I wasn't really willing to spend twenty dollars let alone ninety nine dollars
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for the professional version and I remember all those other Linux distributions that I tried
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in the past I didn't have to pay one cent for any of them and so that that was really starting to
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look pretty appealing to me and I was I was also remembering the virus episode and another
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little tidbit information that I learned about Windows 7 around that time was that although I could
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upgrade from Vista to Windows 7 I couldn't upgrade from XP to Windows 7 so basically installing
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Windows 7 for me would wipe out everything that was already on my computer and that mean that
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meant I would have to do a whole lot of work you know go through a lot of hassle to preserve the
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data that I accumulated on that PC throughout years and that was something I just wasn't prepared
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to do so you know at that point the camel's back was broken I couldn't see myself really sticking
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with Windows but the question was you know could Linux meet the needs that I had and really the
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needs of my family and so what I did was I started trying to devise a plan to see if my family
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could use Linux and be happy and so what I did was you know this was actually around the time
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when Ubuntu was doing a lot of advertising they were actually advertising you would see commercials
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on TV for Ubuntu some guy poking away at a computer and he would invite some stranger
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some passerby to take a look at it and the implication was that the passerby was amazed
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that what the computer was doing and that they assumed it was a Windows PC person would reveal
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finally that this wasn't XP but this was Ubuntu and so those commercials were out there quite a bit
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so what I did was I went to the Ubuntu website I burned a copy of Ubuntu I think it was 8.04
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the XFCE version and I did a dual boot on the desktop so I had XP and Ubuntu and I kind of
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instructed the family just use Ubuntu see if it will meet your needs and don't use the XP
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version and all which was really not a hard choice because the XP version was was just so slow
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that it was really not even feasible to use it at all so it wasn't really a hard choice
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for the family to use the Ubuntu installation that was on that desktop and what happened was
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within weeks the family was really using the Ubuntu Linux exclusively with very few complaints
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and it was then that I started thinking how you know this this just might work we might be able
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to make this swap and so I think the next thing I did was my wife had a laptop and with a lot
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of complaining on her end I said well let me just go ahead and put your Ubuntu on this laptop
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and the presumptuous promise was that it would dramatically increase the speed of the computer
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you'd be able to do a whole lot more but I have no weight and weight and weight for you know
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whatever tasks you were trying to complete to finish and I went ahead and installed Ubuntu on
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that laptop it was an uneventful install it installed perfectly right off the bat and thankfully
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there was a noticeable performance increase so that was that was fantastic I was really impressed
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at that at this time I didn't have my own laptop and so I went and purchased one and I was
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determined that the PC that I purchased actually had this no on it and I was determined that I
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would never boot the computer with a Windows operating system on it so as soon as I got it home
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and unpacked it the very first thing I did was you know take a little pin and use it to open the
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CD tray so I did that before I returned it on and put the Ubuntu CD in the CD tray and so the
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very first time I turned that computer on it was to install Ubuntu so I completely wiped out
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everything that was on there originally and installed Ubuntu and with the exception of some
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graphic card issues this is an HP PC and had an ATI graphics card and radion 3200 I believe
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and that gave me a little bit of trouble but with exception to that the install went perfectly
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and I was really at that point pretty much set in stone that I would never go back to Windows
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I had learned a ton in Ubuntu I found a lot of the applications that that I would normally use
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it was a huge learning curve but it wasn't hard to learn because there were so many resources
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available so many people who are willing to lend a helping hand so it wasn't really that hard
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or switch but there was a lot that I needed to learn a lot of differences between how Windows
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operates and how Linux operates and so I tried a whole lot of different distributions I think
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the desktop remained Ubuntu until really just recently Ubuntu had been on that computer
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really my whole Linux experience until just recently I tried a puppy Linux on my laptop
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for door I tried OpenSusa Slackware which Slackware I think is still my favorite I had tried
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even LFS Linux from scratch which is mind-blowingly complicated it was not really complicated it's
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just tedious the steps are laid out very clearly but it's an extremely tedious process
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if you want to learn everything there is though to learn about Linux try Linux from scratch and
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next to that I would say Slackware and I really like Slackware because of its simplicity it was
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just plain Linux and it was very predictable you know exactly what to expect the one thing I
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really didn't like about Slackware was the maintenance that was required to keep the system
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up-to-date doing upgrades and things like that so because of that there were just certain things
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that I didn't want to have to work at that I hadn't seen in other operating systems and so although
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I really am fond of Slackware I'm not using Slackware now right now all the PCs in house
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are on PC Linux OS which I like a lot there's some little things that I don't like
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but for the most part PC Linux OS you know they they had a slogan as being the distribution
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shopper stopper and I found that to be true once I tried PC Linux OS I pretty much stayed
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with that for the remainder of my Linux experience to date right now I'm actually recording
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this on the laptop that I purchased a while back and it has PC Linux OS installed on it and so
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really that's that's my story one of the most gratifying aspects that I've found with Linux
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is that it really instills a sense of creativity in its users it kind of compels you to create
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just the tools that that come with typical Linux distribution really kind of
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caused the person who's using a system to come up with a solution to create a solution
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for whatever issue you're faced with grab and said and you know all the other command line tools
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it gives you a massive amount of control a massive amount of options and possibilities
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and it just seems like Linux is designed to put control in the hands of the user
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and and give the user every opportunity to create their own solution and comparison to windows
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windows seems to promote buying your solution there's a very limited amount of resources on a
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windows pc that are openly available to the user or even openly advertised to the user
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there's probably other tools there that you can find if you look and you search but they're not
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really well advertised and not promoted and so without question I've become definitely more
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productive more knowledgeable more creative more satisfied user under Linux than ever I was under
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windows I've actually learned Python it seemed like everyone I first installed Linux it seemed
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like everything was done in Python and so because it seemed like Python was so dominant in Linux
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I thought well maybe a good idea for me to learn Python and so I've actually taken that knowledge
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to work and where I work I've created some tools in Python and and that was really the catalyst for
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that was really my knowledge that I had gained in Linux and so that productivity has really
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even crossed beyond what I do at home and it's carried over into so what I do at work so that's
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my my Linux story my switch from windows to legs I am definitely satisfied and the only thing I
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could say is I wish I had done it a lot sooner and so that's my story there's many like it but
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this one is mine bye bye
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thank you for listening to HACCLE public radio hpr responses by caro.net so head on over to caro.nc for all of
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