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Episode: 2088
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Title: HPR2088: How my wife's grandma got me into linux.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2088/hpr2088.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:08:18
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---
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This in HPR episode 2008 and titled How My Wife's Brand-Modeled Meantle Lyrics.
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And in part on the series How I Found Lyrics.
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It's been hosted by Nightwine and in about 33 minutes long.
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The summary is, Nightwine tells us how his wife made a year old brand-modeled meantle Lyrics.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code,
|
||||
HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
|
||||
Hello Hacker Public Radio, this is Nightwines from Nightwines.com.
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Calling in with the mandatory show if you're a regular host on Hacker Public Radio.
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And that is the How I Got into Linux story.
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Well, I'll give you some backgrounds.
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I have been professionally active in computers since 1999,
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which puts me at about 70 years of being an IT professional.
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And in the years before I came an IT professional,
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I already was a computer enthusiast.
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I had the regular Commodore 64 and the Amiga,
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like every kid my age had.
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But after that, my interest for computers kind of waned away.
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It came back full force as I was studying to be an educator.
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I have a social studies background.
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And in order for the courses I was taking, I had to write reports.
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And for those reports, I needed a computer.
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So I got my computer as a present for school from my aunt,
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who bought me a Pentium 75 with, I think it was,
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those are, you know, megs of RAM.
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I think 16 megs of RAM or 8, I'm not really sure anymore.
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A 15-inch screen, a laser printer,
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a laser printer, an inkjet printer.
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And I think that that was it.
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And I can remember a 750 megabytes hard drive.
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So that's how long ago it is.
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I used my computer for reports, writing reports.
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And I remember going to the computer shop nearby
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and picking out a model and asking the guy who sold it.
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That I wanted the computer as long as he could give me the background image
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that they had on the computer in the store.
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And that was really funny because the wallpaper on the computer in the store was a screenshot
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of Deep Space 9, which was taken with a TV video card, TV tuner card.
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And that was set as the background.
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I never remember that thinking that that was so awesome.
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I just had to have that.
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So they pre-installed Windows 95 on there.
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And I got the background, which I found fantastic.
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And I spent the better part of the first half-year
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of owning that computer playing around with it and messing with all kinds of things
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and writing my reports.
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Quickly, I got into this whole computer thing again,
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and it really interested me.
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And by then, I met my wife,
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then girlfriend.
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And I didn't know that at the time,
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but her dad was really into computers.
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And she told me this.
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You know, my dad's really into computers.
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And I thought like, okay, and this was like the first time
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I ever set foot in her house.
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And, you know, that was her dad.
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And he looked very strict because he was a professor.
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And I went like, okay.
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Yeah, and, you know, the second or the third time I came around,
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I kind of asked for him, asked if he could possibly help me out
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because I got me one of these tuner cards,
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TV tuner cards, and they didn't really work right.
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And if you could help me out.
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Sure, he said, you know, come back next week,
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bring your little CPU tower and we'll go upstairs.
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So I just, I fondly remember mounting the steps
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to the upstairs floor at my girlfriend's house at the time.
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And this door opening to my then not father-in-laws,
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but now father-in-laws office.
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And he had like 14 computers just lined up.
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And it was like a wall haul out there.
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And he had CDs and discs and gear.
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And I didn't know what I was seeing.
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So we ended up spending the entire evening tinkering with my computer
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and reinstalling windows and getting the drivers of my S3 video
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||||
card, right? That is how long ago it is.
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And the entire evening, my girlfriend just sat downstairs in the kitchen with her mom
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waiting until her boyfriend came back down,
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because her boyfriend and her dad were tinkering with computers.
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And that was my first step into a world that would change my life forever.
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Because for my father-in-law, he finally had kind of like the son-in-law
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was interested in computers because he has three daughters.
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And I found this mentor that wanted to teach me things.
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So for the next couple of months, if not years, if I would visit my girlfriend,
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he would be like waiting at the door going like, okay, okay, he's coming, he's coming.
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And before I could say hello to my girlfriend, he would snatch me up and we was like,
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let's geek out. And we would go upstairs and geek out and play with computers.
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And that is how I learned. I learned to install Windows computers, I learned to install.
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I Windows 95, Windows 98. He had all these wear CDs and it was awesome, awesome, awesome.
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I learned so much. It came up to the point that the day that I graduated from school as an
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educator, so that's actually kind of a loose translation of a caretaker who works with
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mentally disabled people in the social sector. So the day I finished school,
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I got a phone call from that computer shop where I got my first computer because
|
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that computer shop was very good, my father-in-law was very good friends with that computer shop.
|
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And he took me along on Sunday mornings to help out in the technical department to help fix
|
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computers. So I have been doing this internship in the computer store on Sunday morning where I
|
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could go and help out fixed computers because my dad-in-law would take me with him.
|
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And that's how I got into computers. And the day I finished school, I got a phone call from
|
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the computer shop. They rang me up and they said, do you want to come? I work here.
|
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And I said, yes, why did the computers end up with back? It wasn't until 1999, I got a first
|
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taste of Linux. I was then working as a junior network administrator, which was basically the
|
||||
help test guy at a multimedia company, which had a video editing department, an engineering
|
||||
department, and a games testing department. And I was the IT guy for all of these departments,
|
||||
and it was awesome. It was really, really awesome. And I had all these geeky dudes that worked
|
||||
there. And at a certain point, we were having an issue where we had to loan out software a lot
|
||||
for people to install stuff, because it was all done manually back then. And people would come
|
||||
borrow the CDs that the IT department wouldn't bring them back. And it was kind of a mess. So we thought
|
||||
there has to be another way to kind of distribute this across the network. And I remember that we had
|
||||
this big scusy tower, this tower of scusy drives. And you could hook it to scusy CD-ROM drives, sorry,
|
||||
like 10 of them. And they were used to burn 10 CDs at once. But we could also use them to kind of,
|
||||
you know, reach 10 CDs at once. So this engineering guy that worked with us, we got talking about
|
||||
this, and he said, well, we could do this with Linux, because he was really into Linux. I went
|
||||
like, what the hell is Linux? He said, like, it's like an operating system. And I remember that we
|
||||
had some Linux lying around, because the first time I saw the command line was looking at the old
|
||||
spark stations, the pizza boxes that they had there to do some video encoding. This was the
|
||||
company, by the way, that invented. I kid you not. The department that invented the CDI,
|
||||
the CD interactive from Phillips. These guys invented this. I shit you not. And if you know,
|
||||
if you don't know what the CDI is, well, the CDI is the basis for an interactive CD-ROM
|
||||
or DVD as we know it today in PlayStation and Xbox technology. That was kind of the first steps
|
||||
in that technology. So they came up with the CDI. So that department worked there. They held
|
||||
all these geeky engineers. And we got talking about making this DVD, turning this DVD tower with
|
||||
these 10 CD-ROM drives, or CD tower, with these 10 CD-ROM drives into a software library.
|
||||
And the guy said, yeah, we can do that with Linux. So I thought like Linux, like on the spark
|
||||
stations, you know, I don't know anything about that. What is that? He said, I'll show you, I'll show you.
|
||||
So he came now with this install CD, CDs. It was like a folder with about 10 of them.
|
||||
And he came now with Sousa. And I thought it was Sousa 4.0 something. I can't remember.
|
||||
And he would, you know, start the graphical installation. I went like, wow, what's that?
|
||||
He said like, you know, it's an operating system and it comes with all these apps. You know,
|
||||
these applications, it's all included. It's all for free. And I went like, what do you mean? It's
|
||||
all free. It's all free. And it's all on these CDs. So you don't have to, you know, download it,
|
||||
or buy it. No, no, no, no, it's all out there. And I said like, wow. So we did the first install.
|
||||
And he asked me, he said like, you know, what do you want to install? And I remember distinctly
|
||||
answering it, everything. So we ended up doing the first installation of that Sousa with everything.
|
||||
Yeah, we went through the seven CDs and it installed every single application that you could get.
|
||||
So we ended up with this. I think it was at the time a KVD desktop,
|
||||
which when you clicked on the menu, it would just expand and expand and expand and expand
|
||||
with applications that you could open. And I remember going through them all,
|
||||
well, not all of them, but mostly all of them. I literally spent hours trying to figure this out
|
||||
what this was. And that's the first time I ever saw Linux, because what we used that machine for
|
||||
was as a CD-ROM library that people could access over the network. So he showed me how Samba worked
|
||||
and I didn't understand. And then he showed me the command line I didn't understand that.
|
||||
But I was fascinated by this graphical desktop that could do all these crazy things.
|
||||
And that's how I got into Linux. So pretty soon, I started experimenting with Linux myself.
|
||||
And I distinctly remember going to the computer bookshop and buying the box,
|
||||
which came with that book. And I remember reading the book and doing the installs and trying
|
||||
to get Linux to work. Now, hardware support at that time, because I was using this standard,
|
||||
you know, PC tower with like, I don't know, a sound blaster and an Hercules video card.
|
||||
It was very good. So mostly everything worked out of the box. Sometimes I had some trouble with that
|
||||
and network card, but I got some old trichon or tree commas. We say, three-com network cards from
|
||||
from my boss. Like, you know, use this one, these work. And I play around with it. It was
|
||||
fascinating. But every now and then, I would just run into this boundary where, for example, I couldn't
|
||||
get flashed to play or I couldn't get an MP3 to play. And then this wonderful system was like
|
||||
not really working for me. So I started distro hopping as YouTube. So I think one of the next
|
||||
distros that I found was Noppix, which I found amazing. Because it ran off of CD and it ran on
|
||||
everything. So I played around with Noppix a lot. And then I came into one Linux distribution.
|
||||
I added to Sheba laptop at the time. That would really start to work for me. And that was
|
||||
college Linux. It doesn't exist anymore. I think it was based on Noppix, which was based on
|
||||
I don't know, Debian or RPM. I'm not really sure. And I played around with college Linux. And I
|
||||
could get an, it can't pre-packaged with, you know, software that you could really use. Like,
|
||||
I don't know. It was like college software to manage your money and to do some text processing,
|
||||
more processing and stuff like that. So I didn't have these cool names. It was called distros.
|
||||
We're called like Darth Vader Edition, Skywalker Edition. And then it would, you know, start to
|
||||
track when a new edition of Noppix, of college Linux would come out and install that on my laptop
|
||||
and try to get everything working. And that was my first introduction into partitioning and stuff.
|
||||
So yeah, it went on like that for quite a while. And then I got hold of Mandrake Linux.
|
||||
Which was also pretty interesting because it came with all these applications. And it had a little
|
||||
bit more support for third-party stuff like flash and stuff out of the box. It was kind of cleaner
|
||||
than the first versions of Susa I played around with. And I remember installing that and playing
|
||||
around with that. And I distinctly remember first trying to dual boot and then going back to
|
||||
Windows all the time. And then, you know, sometimes really di-harding it and just wiping my drive,
|
||||
putting Linux on it doesn't seem. I'm going to go for it. I'm not going to disrupt. I'm going to see
|
||||
if I get this working and getting frustrated after a while and then throwing it off and throwing
|
||||
something else on it. You know, how do you mess around with Linux? By then, I was very slowly
|
||||
getting into podcasting. I discovered podcasting back in 2000. Let me see. 1, 2, 3 or something.
|
||||
It was at the very, very dawn of podcasting. I remember one of the proto-podcasts that was out
|
||||
there, the Daily Source Code. By Adam Curry was like an episode 40 or something. And I caught on
|
||||
to it and I started hanging out with these guys and sending in feedback and starting to record
|
||||
my first podcast in the car and stuff like that. So, yeah. And I remember one day listening to
|
||||
a fantastic podcast that was called Slash.Review by Andy McKasky where Andy would read the headlines
|
||||
from Slash. Every day. And it was so cool. I am so sad that doesn't exist anymore because that
|
||||
to me was one of the greatest podcasts to stay informed to listen to on my way to work on my
|
||||
first generation iPod. So, that was nice. And if he mentioned this Ubuntu or Ubuntu, I don't know
|
||||
how he had he mentioned it a couple of times, Ubuntu or Ubuntu. And I thought like, all right,
|
||||
this Ubuntu thing sounds interesting. So, let's give it a try. And I did. And I installed Ubuntu
|
||||
on one of my machines that law and behold. What was that? It worked. I managed to get stuff working.
|
||||
And then I found this online script. I thought a thing was I can't for the life of me. I can't
|
||||
remember the name of it right now. It was this first auto install script that would install
|
||||
the right codex and MP3 and third party software automatically. And I remember in the beginning,
|
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people used to brief fire when you installed that. They said, like, it's bad. And the repositories
|
||||
are not updated. And you shouldn't do that and this and that. And I went like, wow, this is
|
||||
fascinating because for the first time, I had a system that I could actually use. So I started
|
||||
playing around with this Ubuntu more and more and it became more and more a part of my workflow
|
||||
because I started to notice that I didn't have to roll back to my Windows machines that often.
|
||||
By that time, I also got my first Mac. And I was starting to hang out
|
||||
kind of 50-50 on Ubuntu and on my iBook. And I found it really interesting and it was really
|
||||
starting to work. Back then, we still had terrible problems with stuff like Wi-Fi
|
||||
being supported and stuff. But we found ways around that by basically
|
||||
plugging in wired network cards or PCM CIA cards that you knew were supported and there were
|
||||
just a few. So whenever I got it working, I would be so happy. And that's how I kind of played
|
||||
around with it. Linux played a pivotal role in Nightwise.com. Because by then, I started to
|
||||
blog and posted some articles on the website that was kind of it. And one day, my wife's grandmother
|
||||
who was like 76 at the time, or a little bit older, even. I think she's 83 now. She would be
|
||||
so 77. Yeah, 76, 77 years old. And she had this computer because my wife's family was pretty
|
||||
geeky. And she always had this little arcade video game, this handheld arcade video game tetris
|
||||
that you'd like to play. And that broke. So my dad and law dove into his office and got out one of
|
||||
these insanely old Linux laptops. Linux laptops. IBM laptops would Windows 95 and a couple of games
|
||||
and gave it to her and she played patience on that and mine sweeper and stuff like that. And she
|
||||
really liked it, but it broke. So we needed to find her new machine. And I thought like, you know
|
||||
what? I am going to find an old laptop. I had one lying around. I am going to set up Ubuntu on it.
|
||||
I'm going to install the games that she likes. And I'm going to configure it so that it's very
|
||||
easy to operate. And I did. Pure out of an experiment because my grandmother and my grandmother
|
||||
loved to play with computers. And I thought like, oh, there's Ubuntu. It has a lot of games on it.
|
||||
You can, you know, work on that one. So I installed it. And it was an old pinium 3 compact laptop
|
||||
if I remember correctly. And I think it was Ubuntu 60405050808. I don't know. Five something.
|
||||
I installed it for her. I used the the special script that would install all of the codecs and
|
||||
the extra software. And I just gave it to her. And I remember taking some screenshots
|
||||
because I thought it was a cool project. And she loved it. She literally played all night
|
||||
on this thing. She would, you know, we would go over on a Sunday and she would say like, man,
|
||||
I've been playing hamburger time or burger time until three o'clock in the morning.
|
||||
And I, and this tux racer thing is really addictive. So I suddenly had this 76-year-old
|
||||
grand who was addicted to Linux. And that was cool. So I thought, you know what? I'll blog about
|
||||
it. I've blogged about it. And I posted it on dig. I remember posting that on Friday evening.
|
||||
I posted it to dig. And I thought, I forgot about the blog post. And on Saturday morning,
|
||||
eight o'clock, I got a phone call. And it was my IAS, my hosting provider for my website.
|
||||
And he said, dear Mr. Nightwise, do you plan on continuing the load on your website or
|
||||
do the other websites that are also hosted on this share platform also get a chance to be accessed
|
||||
by the internet today? Because quite frankly, the visits to your website are blowing our servers
|
||||
away. Went like, what the hell is going on? Back then, I had like 10 visitors to my site
|
||||
a day. You know, nobody knew me. I made it in dream weaver or something. I don't know.
|
||||
So I thought like, what the hell is going on? So I looked at my stats and I thought, don't look
|
||||
my stats, bro. Because, you know, yesterday it is, there's any teeny bar. And today there's this
|
||||
big bar. And this big bar says that there are 9,000 visitors which have visited my website
|
||||
overnight. I got to the front page of Dig with my article called Ubuntu for your grandmother.
|
||||
And that kind of, you know, I got linked through by Debian, Debian.org linked to my website.
|
||||
So that was like, my Google juice was immediately validated for the rest of my life.
|
||||
And it was awesome. I went like, wow, what the hell is going on? And there were like comments and
|
||||
articles and suddenly there was this big brew about this one article Ubuntu for your grandmother.
|
||||
And that's where it took off. So Ubuntu became my distro of choice. And I have been using it
|
||||
for forever. I either are using Ubuntu on PCs. And once I got a Mac, I thought, you know,
|
||||
I can do Ubuntu on this. I started tinkering with getting Linux on your Mac. And I kind of
|
||||
became a go-to guy for some of the podcast community when it came to that. So I played around with
|
||||
running Ubuntu on my iMac, which looked awesome. And I didn't distro hop a lot. I might have,
|
||||
you know, tried different desktops and played with mints, but I mostly, you know, stayed on
|
||||
on Debian derivatives. Not because I'm a fanboy or anything, but just because it worked for me.
|
||||
And that is my philosophy. Technology has to work for you. Instead, the other way around. So any
|
||||
distro that would, you know, require you to spend hours and hours and hours and hours,
|
||||
getting it to work is not something that I really like to use. I just need something I can really
|
||||
use and I can play with. And that's how Ubuntu really started to work for me. First as a desktop,
|
||||
then as a server, because I found out I could do things with SSH and with the command line.
|
||||
And I could script things and I could find out all of these cool things. I got on IRC again,
|
||||
met a lot of cool people there. And that's how I kind of got into Linux and have remained into
|
||||
Linux ever since. So fast forward to today, where the number of computers I have has decreased.
|
||||
I used to have like five or six. Now I only have like three. And the role that Ubuntu is playing,
|
||||
that Linux is playing in my life has also significantly changed. It used to be an experimental
|
||||
platform and I would use to try to do as much on Linux as I could, but if it didn't work, I didn't
|
||||
mind. But that kind of changed when I got my own company. I started my own company two years ago
|
||||
and I thought, you know what? I want to know if I can do this using some cloud software and
|
||||
a Linux machine. So I got me a Lenovo Twist, ThinkPads Twist. It's all Ubuntu on it and started to use
|
||||
it as my main machine to start up my company. And one year later, I was still using that laptop
|
||||
and I had started up my entire company on a Linux machine. And that's when I started to see
|
||||
that Linux had fundamentally changed for me, where it was no longer a hobby project,
|
||||
with something that I would actually and really use. So that was pretty, pretty cool.
|
||||
Because last year, I ordered my first, my first actual pre-installed Linux laptop,
|
||||
which was my Dell XPS 13, which came pre-installed with Linux. That was also a big step for me.
|
||||
And I have been using that laptop ever since for my job. So I have to rely on this crap.
|
||||
So in that way, my journey to Linux is perhaps different than other people's journey to Linux,
|
||||
where many of the Linux enthusiasts have the luxury of going like, yeah, we're going to do,
|
||||
you know, we believe in free software and I believe in free software. And we believe in the fact
|
||||
that you should only use free software and you cannot use binary blobs or stuff like that. Look,
|
||||
I don't believe in that kind of stuff. Because for me, this just has to work. And if I have to use
|
||||
a proprietary driver to get my video card to work, then so be it. I'll use a proprietary driver.
|
||||
I'm still using a free operating system and I'm sharing my knowledge about that with the rest
|
||||
of the world as I'm doing right now. And I don't care if it's not 100% stolen proof,
|
||||
or it doesn't sit well with Jonathan Nado, with whom I've had the most delightful conversations
|
||||
about this topic. I'm not a, not a pureist. I'm a pragmatist. I'm pragmatic. If it works, it works.
|
||||
So I've also stepped away from all these discussions like, it has to be, you know,
|
||||
this Linux distro versus that Linux distro. I don't care. As long as it works, you know,
|
||||
I'm sticking to Ubuntu because I know how that works. I should play around with Red Hat or Fedora.
|
||||
I can perhaps one day, but right now works for me. I think that getting Linux to do what I want
|
||||
and spending time on that is to be far more important than spending time on trying out one certain
|
||||
distro versus the other because there are, well, ideological differences between the Debian
|
||||
and the RPM side of the pond. I don't believe in that kind of ideological difference.
|
||||
I've never been one with these discussions that used to go on, like, yeah, you shouldn't
|
||||
use the command line. You should only, you should use the command line. You can't use the graphical
|
||||
interface. The graphical interface is for losers. You know, those kind of stuff, these discussions
|
||||
that we used to have on, on, on, on, on, on, on, use, use net. Sorry. It's so long ago. I don't
|
||||
believe in that either. I went like, does it work for you? Then it works for you. Do you want to
|
||||
click 2,000 times? And is that more convenient than do it? Or do you want to write a script that
|
||||
just repeats the same line of code 2,000 times? Whatever works. You know, my rsync backups, I do
|
||||
them via the command line because it's easy and I can script them. But I am not going to resize
|
||||
a single JPEG versus, you know, using the command line with a command that is longer than the first
|
||||
three chapters of the, I don't know, the old testament just because I'm a command line kind of guy.
|
||||
I love my command line, but if a graphical user interface is faster, I'll use that. I love the
|
||||
command line just because of the fact that it's neat. It's not very destructive and you can run it
|
||||
anywhere. So, that's my vision on that. So, I'll round up with where I am in Linux today.
|
||||
Let me see. So, I have the Dell XPS 13 running 16.04. I only run long-term support versions of Linux
|
||||
of Ubuntu because I don't want to distro hub all the time. As I said, I rely on this thing.
|
||||
I can do my entire podcast production on Windows, on Linux and on the Mac. So, I can use Linux
|
||||
as a full-time podcast production platform and run my company. I have an IT consultancy company.
|
||||
I can do that all on Linux. I use OpenOffice software on all three platforms.
|
||||
Instead of relying on Word, I try to have the word flaws of my company completely aligned towards
|
||||
cross-platform-friendly software. So, that being LibraOffice. So, yeah, there you go.
|
||||
I have two Raspberry Pi's, which one of them is kind of my remote in server.
|
||||
I have a home server running Linux 14.04, which runs myplex, which runs my scripts,
|
||||
which runs Sonor, and which is a very important part of my daily IT infrastructure,
|
||||
which is an essential part of my home network. I have an Android phone. If that counts as Linux,
|
||||
I have Windows Phone. Of course, I don't have a Windows Phone. Only four people have a Windows Phone
|
||||
on the planet and not one of those four. I have Ubuntu Phone, First Generation, which I think is
|
||||
an interesting item, but which is not ready for prime time yet. I had been thinking about getting
|
||||
the Macyu tablet, but I'm thinking that I'm not going to possibly not going to do that.
|
||||
And that's basically it. So, I try to play around with Linux a lot in VMs. I have come to a phase
|
||||
in my life where I don't distro-hop anymore, and that saves me a lot of time and makes me very
|
||||
productive, because I find out ways to do things with the tools that I have, and finding out to
|
||||
get it done instead of switching from one distro to the other all the time, because cool kids say
|
||||
you have to be on that, and cool kids say you have to be on that, so I don't really care about that.
|
||||
And that is my journey to Linux. My journey to Linux has been going strong for 17 years now,
|
||||
from my first encounters and very amateuristic efforts and florets into the tux world,
|
||||
to a moment where I use Linux on a daily basis. My wife uses Linux on a daily basis,
|
||||
not as a desktop. I did put elementary on her iMac once, and she liked it.
|
||||
But as a, you know, I use it on a daily basis. My wife uses it on a daily basis as a home server.
|
||||
We have some Raspberry Pi's at home, I use Android, and I have my Linux machine, my laptop,
|
||||
my XPS 13, which I take to work with me to do my consultancy gig on, so it's really reliable,
|
||||
and Linux has matured, both on the graphical side and on the support side,
|
||||
just something that I really enjoy using. The community has grown up, and I'm very glad with that,
|
||||
as well. I'm not a developer, I can't write extensive bash scripts, but I am some, I'm an advocate,
|
||||
I'm not a religious advocate, an ideological advocate, I'm just a practice that says like,
|
||||
if that works for you, then that works for you. So that has been my journey into Linux.
|
||||
If you want to find out more about how I work in my cross-platform world, the philosophy of
|
||||
the Nightwise.com podcast is haxtips and tweaks for cross-platform geeks. People who are on
|
||||
Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, or SunSlaris, or whatever, check it out, www.canithtwis.com.
|
||||
You can subscribe and get the podcast that I do on a fairly regular basis on whatever
|
||||
podcast you're using. Until then, let's technology work for you instead of the other way around,
|
||||
and I will hope to see you again in the feed for Hacker Public Radio.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing
|
||||
to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove
|
||||
Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club, and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
|
||||
or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on
|
||||
Creative Commons, Extribution, ShareLite, 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user