Episode: 1541 Title: HPR1541: How I Came To Linux Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1541/hpr1541.mp3 Transcribed: 2025-10-18 04:49:56 --- Hi, everybody. This is Claudio Miranda, new manomias, Claudio M from IRC, but I'm also co-host of the Linux Basement podcast. Well, I wanted to record an episode here for Hacker Public Radio because I hear that they are in need of shows. So here's my contribution. Got something in the works for a series I'm planning, but that's gonna come down later on. It's still not quite there yet, but I'm getting some ideas floating around. But I figured I'd start off and submit this one here on how I came to Linux. So in introduction first, let's let's talk about how I started with computers. Many many years ago when I was a young lad, I can the late 70s, early 80s, I took a programming course on Basic and this was I would say maybe fifth, sixth grade in elementary was a Catholic elementary school. Actually, it was a Catholic K-8. K-8 is what I guess what you'd call them now, but everything was integrated middle school and everything like that. But anyway, so I took a programming course there and it was on these old Commodore systems. Now they looked like Commodore pets, but apparently the label on them said CBN. So I don't know if maybe they had a version of the CB of the pet rebranded as a CBM for educational institutions, but that's what I remember. And I do remember that we had to save all our projects in on cassette and then trying to recover them from cassette was always an interesting experience. But that class kind of taught me a lot and I remember the last project that we had to do was we had to write in the code for a skiing game and it was all with ASCII characters and everything, but it was a lot of fun and it really just strengthened my desire for all this kind of stuff. Now I've always had an interest in all this kind of electronic stuff and I've always had an interest in music as well. So those are my two loves music and electronics, specifically computers that kind of went into that direction, but I always had this desire to tinker and take things apart and my parents would always get angry at me because I would never be able to put things back together the way they were. So yeah, so I kind of molded that into you know, into computers that kind of started going into computers and then into programming. Well, as the years went by, you know, when I went from, no, I'm sorry, from seventh to eighth grade, the elementary school I was in had closed down because of financial issues. So they moved us from the Catholic school that we were in to another one in nearby in the area and had a bit of an upgrade there because I was still taking the programming courses on basic, but this time we went from the Commodore CBN slash pet to the Apple IIE. Now this was great. I still had the experience from my previous class, but this was more of an advanced class and I did enjoy it just as much, but the problem I had was having to stay after school and do my homework for the class at school. Eventually my parents did get me a computer for Christmas and one of the things that I always wanted, one of the computers I was wanted was the VIC-20 because I had a friend who had a VIC-20 and we used to play all these old text adventure games and I just started it was awesome. Now I had in Atari 2600, I had you know, all these consoles, but I didn't have computer, actual proper computer. And so my parents, after telling them which computer I wanted, they eventually got me a computer. Now, blessed our hearts, they had no idea what to get, so I ended up opening my present and it was a Mattel Aquarius. Not sure if many of you are familiar with this system, it's a rather obscure system, but it's it's kind of intriguing, given that it reminded me a lot of the Intellivision just put in computer form. Think of the Calico Vision and the Atom. This is kind of what the Aquarius was compared to the Intellivision. However, they did use different processors, which I eventually found out. I'll be sure to include in the show notes a link to Wikipedia about the Aquarius, maybe from some other sites as well. So anyway, this was a computer that I got for Christmas and it did have a basic interpreter on there. So the saving grace was that I was able to actually program some stuff with what I learned in basic. Granted, a lot of the stuff that I was doing on the Apple 2E had to be ported over and certain things would work, certain things wouldn't work. So I guess that was my first foray into porting app porting programs from one platform to another. But anyway, so still saving stuff into cassette tape with that system and that was always an exercise in patience. But it did me well for a good while until a few Christmas is later. My parents actually did upgrade me from that computer to an Apple 2C, which is great because now I was working on the same platform and I would be able to move between the two systems easily, do my homework at home and submit it day after or whenever we had the class to be able to submit it in time without having staff school. So anyway, that was my experience with computers. I held on to that Apple 2C for a very long time. I would say way into the into the late 80s, probably even into the early 90s. But by that time I had kind of grown out of doing all that basic programming. Now I did used to get subscriptions to family computing and some other magazines and I would stay up late at night typing in all these these games that they had in basic for different platforms and they had it for the Apple 2. And I do remember sifting through those pages and those magazines reading articles on different computers and games and a whole bunch of other software. And I remember going through and finding this one advertisement for a it was a book on Unix. And for some reason that stuck with me. It's like what is this Unix that's mentioned here. I've never heard of it before. I've heard basic, I've heard of DOS, ProDOS and all that being in the Apple 2 world. But I never heard of this Unix stuff and it just they made it seem like this mysterious and wonderful system. But anyway that stuck with me. I never really looked into it and you know I just kept gong on my own life as a kid as a teenager and you know eventually we moved from where I was living in New York and like I said I kind of dropped off the whole focus on computers and started doing other things focusing more on music and taking piano lessons and things like that. But I was always a fan of the Apple 2. Never really did have experience with a PC with the IBM PCs or anything like that. I did actually have my first experience with a Macintosh. This was in the late 80s. My father was renting an office week with another person that he knew who was also his client and they decided to work together and he actually had like a small printing press there while he worked on a lot of the graphics design. Now mind you this is way before computers so it was all by hand, all in the old ways of doing things. But his friend there actually purchased a computer and it was a I believe a Macintosh plus and was just blown away by the whole graphical environment. Having come from a very command line oriented environment with the Apple 2 and so I was blown away by this and I said this is future this has got to be it and so I guess that's where my my love for Apple machines kind of came from. I've always been an Apple fan I've always been a Mac fan don't hold it against me but that would that affinity towards that platform would continue on through the 90s as I started studying sound engineering and started focusing more on my music on the music side of my life. It a lot of the sequencing and you know composition and music composition on a bunch of Macs that they had at the university once we moved to Miami in the late in the early 90s. We you know that over at the school they did have some PCs but I always stayed far away from them I always stuck with Macs much easier to deal with everything was graphical so that kind of melded to between computers and music and I always I always have even to this day. So time progresses I graduate from there well not even let's go back a little bit. I actually was one of the assistants in the meeting lab there and eventually I did start getting PCs in there. Most of these were the old IBM PS2s and we had to make sure that they were working with a software and all that kind of stuff so I said well I got to deal with this Windows stuff and mind you this is Windows 3-1 and still I'm a star at the time so not really my cup of tea but I had to thrust myself into it and kind of familiarize myself with the environment even though I hated it with the passion. So I did become familiar with Windows and DOS and even the early days of the internet if you will because I would connect to a freenet that was available for the college at the time called Seflon Freenet actually it was it was a access that we had for the what was it the southeast Florida network is I think is what it stands for what it stood for I don't remember but I guess I can look that up if I find anything I'll put it in the show notes so I would connect to that I would use Go for use FTP but that was it it was all a controlled environment I do remember that when I logged into these machines when I remotely logged into them it was all through dial up on a PC that was using a terminal software when I did connect to their servers I noticed that it was a Sun OS server so here we go again getting exposed a little more to some Unix environments here so it was rather interesting and I did read up on FTP and all that kind of stuff and the World Wide Web and all those things well not even the World Wide Web that wasn't quite popular just yet again this is like maybe 90 93 I would say 93 yeah so I still wasn't familiar with the World Wide Web and didn't become familiar with it until much later still my experience with that was was there and I kept working in the middle lab kept doing all that kind of stuff but I started getting more interested in computers again so eventually my parents the Apple 2 at this point was useless it's way out of the way and I think at this point it was just dead because it was just sold so eventually my parents did purchase another computer for the family for Christmas and yes this was a Mac since we were practically an Apple household my father also was starting to work on Macs and he would actually in the past use that Mac Plus just to kind of familiarize himself with it but he never really touched the computers until much later on he still as a Mac user and I'm trying to get him out of that but anyway so I still working on Macs now I finally have a Mac at home and I can do all the music stuff that I wanted to do but I was still connected to the BBSs and and Seflin and all that stuff from that Mac using terminal software that was available for the Mac so I continue on as a Mac user as an avid Mac user and I eventually graduated from that college and I was hired I started working at this local ISP so the good thing about it was that I heard up had already gained some experience with Windows and DOS not told not a lot of experience but good enough to be dangerous so I was I was hired by this ISP local ISP which doesn't exist anymore and and I went ahead and you know I was basically a field tech and going to different houses different businesses and setting up the internet for them through the ISP mainly on Windows machines some DOS machines absolutely no Macs but I did configure my Mac to connect through the ISP through DILO so if that ever was a situation I would come into I would not have a problem unfortunately it then never happened but anyway so at this ISP I was exposed to a lot more Windows and a lot more a lot more PCs a lot more different environments even Windows 95 which at the time I would say this is about 95 96 I started to become familiar with at the time also personally I was collecting a bunch of old PCs just playing around with them now with Windows and yeah I did have some Windows 95 copies flown around from friends given to me but in my time with this ISP and as I guess I became more you know more comfortable with the owner of the ISP you know we became friends and everything and he introduced me to well he showed me the servers that they had for for allowing people to access the internet through them and I guess this would be my first introduction to Linux as an operating system I had no idea what it was he was the one that introduced me to it and he would speak he talked about Linux like it was God's gift to the world and and I'm listening to this and and I always had the philosophy that an operating system should be something that comes with the computer I guess because my computers at the time came with some sort of oh as or some sort of basic interpreter something that can make it useful I'd never believe that an operating system should be something separate from the computer because without an operating system the computer is useless so at least my opinion anyway so I always thought that the operating system should be something that's freely available and the applications I guess if they want to charge for it as proprietary open or whatever that would be up to the developer but an operating system itself is something that I thought was essential for a user to just a computer so he's telling me about Linux and about all and about how it's free and it's not just free to to download and install but it's also free to modify and that you could actually make those changes available freely to others and I kind of that's how I kind of was introduced to the whole free and free software and open source philosophy so I'm sitting here I'm like wow this is amazing and it just opened my eyes to I said I've got to give this a try and so he actually set up a box for me with I believe it was a version of red had an early version I don't remember exactly and was running fvwm as the graphical as a window manager I had no idea how to get that going but he would set our for me and I would just go and try and browse the web and try and do all these things and while I could it I was rather limited mainly because of my lack of knowledge but I said I was determined to learn this because I really wanted to get this installed on some of the PCs I had at home I didn't want to run Windows I wanted a Mac back and afford it so I said I'm gonna learn this I'm gonna try and figure it out I broke that machine so many times you have no idea and I didn't know how to get it back up and running so he would sometimes help me out and get that going but that was kind of it was kind of a love hate affair with with me and Linux but I wasn't gonna let myself get get down I really want to learn this the whole philosophy had already captured my heart and I was in love with it so I eventually well just to make this little short the ISP eventually after a couple of years closed down and as a parting gift I guess for having stuck so long with the company he the owner actually gave me one of the PCs for free so I took that one home and I went ahead and I installed a Linux distribution or actually not really I at this point I was still I needed a computer that worked out of the box so I went ahead and I installed a copy of Windows 95 on it and that won't from Windows 95 to Windows 98 and so on but I didn't give up on using Linux again I was still would have preferred to have a Mac being a Mac user preferably and I dabbled in emulating stuff on there and Windows as to make it run like a Mac but it which just wasn't the same so I would actually end up using the Mac and my parents house because I was still with my parents eventually I did move out and I couldn't take that Mac with me so I was forced to use that PC now while I was using Windows on that PC Windows 98 I guess at the time later on late 90s I started reading up on Linux following all the different Linux sites and I eventually did get a copy I don't remember if it was for my birthday or for Christmas it seems that it always seems to be the theme of Christmas in these milestones of my life so I ended up getting a copy of Red Hat 4.2 as a gift and so I said this is awesome I finally have a copy of Linux and I can install because for me downloading and ISO just was not possible on dial it would take practically forever so I went ahead and decided to take one of the pieces I had and install Linux the Red Hat on that I was able to get it up and running after a few trial and error and but I couldn't get it on the internet and that's what I had some trouble with especially with the with the modem now I don't remember if the modem that I had was a win modem or if it was I do believe it was an actual hardware US robotics modem but this is so long ago so but nevertheless I did do what I what I could to get it up and running and there were times where I actually was able to connect with that Linux box but I still had the Windows box just as it's something for school and just for other tasks that I needed because I needed something that worked it was my production machine well time went by and I started dabbling a little more with Linux and he came more depth with it more familiar with it and I started I started doing some distro hopping and so I would go to school and I would start downloading distributions before that I actually purchased the copy of Suza I think it was 5.1 and I started playing with that and installing it at work and telling my co-workers about it how great it was and and and it would just fall into fear just because they didn't see they didn't see the what I saw with Linux and how great it was and the whole idea of a free as in you know not just free as in beer but for instance beach district you know operating so I played around with ads all with that later on as the the beginning of the 2000s I started playing around with a lot of other distributions I went from that Red Hat to Suza and then jumped to Mandrake and I stayed with that for good while because I liked that a lot of graphical tools for the command line stuff I really kind of washed out on the command line stuff but I did have some max some older max that I played around with and got them online again I've still preferred using the Mac for my everyday use still didn't have one still didn't have enough money for one but I was able to get some older ones I also started playing around with some Linux distributions that were for the PowerPC I started installing yellow dog on some max at that that I had at work and that was it was fun to try out and to and to just play around with and I eventually just started using that for the majority of my time while I was working but I did have to switch back to Mac OS I had the computer that I had at this one job once I was working for the school system was was a power Mac 8500 I believe anyway so I would play around with a part PC Linux there and I would play around with X86 Linux at home and you know I would I would install it on my then seller on 300 a I would I would test out with with Debbie and Mandrake and Suza and all these distributions and like I said I stuck with Mandrake for a good portion of the 2000 the early 2000s and then I kind of got tired because I would end the breaking things and some of the tools that that Mandrake had at the time would end up breaking everything else and it's just there was no consistency and so I said you know what let me try and find something else and so I saw this Slackware and they say it was simple a very simple Linux distribution of course I misunderstood and took simple to mean easy to use and not in simple as a simple design of the operating system so Slackware kind of kicked my butt when I tried it at version 8 I cried and then went back to Mandrake but eventually I did come back to Slackware version 9 and I stuck with it and I have to say that's where I really cut my teeth with Linux I know there's a saying out there that says you know you want to learn Red Hat use Red Hat you want to learn Debian use Debian you want to learn Linux use Slackware of course nowadays that can be debated with other distributions but at the time it was Slackware so I did enjoy Slackware I I had it installed on that 300A for a good while until it just was tools for anything and on the PC end it ended it ended up being probably my main my main Linux distribution so I went ahead from configuring stuff graphically to configuring stuff the command line and at least just to get x11 working so you know and start using stuff again we had at the time at this time we had broadband everything was connected through the network ports so very easy to get all that going now my love for the Mac still did not go away I do that thanks to work I had some experience with OS 10 when it came out and I got to play with it and I love being able to pull up the command the the terminal I'm being able to run commands that I was familiar with in Linux and it just blew me away so I eventually moved to OS 10 at work but I still played around with Linux there at home I was basically Linux with this desire to be running Mac OS 10 at some point at around 2005 I want to say I finally was able to purchase my own Mac so I got myself and I'm actually five two gigahertz came with OS 10 10 points three I believe I don't remember it's not even that important but it came with a decent version of OS 10 no I'm sorry OS 10.4 came with tiger and I was so happy to have that machine so for a long time my primary system went from being Windows and then Linux and then from Linux and Windows to OS 10 and Linux and Windows so that was the order of my preference I really didn't want to use Windows I only used it because I had no choice but now I had the choice to have a Mac and I was able to do all my I was able to use all my applications that I did for sequencing and everything especially the stuff that was on on on the older Mac OS and work on that on OS 10 and I was happy until Apple decided to sell some nuts not so quality hardware I guess if you want to say the hardware had a defect and the defect was a bad capacitor design so my name I'm actually five that I loved then last very long I would say maybe around 2007 2008 it was it was becoming an issue and I had to have the boards replaced twice and Apple was not forthcoming as even though they had a replacement program because of that defect so I was pissed and I said never again will I let Apple burn me and so thus began my migration after the first motherboard fail and the second motherboard fail over to Linux at this point I was already getting into a boom tube which was the up and coming Linux distribution for human beings as they proclaim and I was happy I liked it I liked it for my everyday use it it kind of slack work took a back seat to it home was that I still love slack work and I didn't want to give it up because I learned so much and now I'm still distro hopping playing with Debbie and playing with with slack we're playing with the boom tube and every so often I may be play with Fedora but there's some history to that I know back in the day Redhead did some Redhead did some things with the community that was not not very pleasing to the community and so I didn't like what they were doing and I decided to stop using Redhead altogether and Redhead to base distributions altogether I fell in love with the Debbie in way of doing things and the slack war way of doing things and the boom tube had a very user-friendly way of doing the Debbie in way of doing things and so I ended up doing that so my order of preference I guess would have been at the time Ubuntu, Slackware, Debbie in and then moving over from OS10 trying to make my primary system a Linux-based system and not the other way around because of all these issues that I had with Apple so eventually I was able to do that the IMACG5 finally took kicked the bucket and the replacement program had already expired so I had no choice but to move everything over. Thankfully I had already done that and so a lot of my computer usage towards the late 2000s before 2010 and into 2010 was was all Linux-based so my primary system finally moved to Linux I was a lot more advanced now in my Linux usage it was it was not afraid of using the command line it was just my preferred platform and so I started dabbling in audio especially with Ubuntu Studio I started dabbling with audio programs on that as a matter of fact I actually installed the Ubuntu Studio on my PowerMACG5 because there was a PowerPC port of it and actually no my mistake I actually installed Ubuntu on it and installed the Ubuntu Studio metapackages for until it finally died so that one was due of booting for a while with Linux and OS10 preferably on OS10 in the beginning that was my primary and then eventually I moved over to being strictly Linux and moved all those applications and songs and projects and everything over so once that IMACG5 kicked the bucket I copied everything over to my PC at the time which was an Athlon XP 2400 plus which was running Linux and I just continued on and so been dabbling with a bunch of Linux distributions going from Arch going from various flavors of Slack where eventually I did leave Ubuntu because you know it just didn't like the direction that we're going into and actually ironically I moved over to Fedora after playing around version 13 and falling in love with it because all the previous versions just were craft to me but anyway so I'm still sticking strong with Fedora I've got Fedora 28 on my laptop here which is a Toshiba M4 Prodej M400 I've got my oldasis EPC 901 which ran various flavors of Ubuntu ran Slackware for a little while and is now actually running Ubuntu which I'm using for some testing just that's how it's the operating system and on my PC at home guess what I'm running Slackware 64 and it's been running ever since like a champ and that one is actually a newer system I would say I got it in 2010-2011 it's an AMD Phenom X4 965 Black Edition and it's running very well and it's been running Slackware and it will keep running Slackware for as long as I may have I guess or it lives so how funny that my life and that were started actually with my life with Linux started with an advertisement a family computing magazine about Unix and never thought I'd end up running a Unix like operating system like Linux or even with the BSD's which I'm dabbling in recently so kind of funny how life how life is so there you have it that's my how I got into Linux how I came to Linux episode I hope you enjoyed it I hope I haven't rambled too long as I usually do if you've listened to Linux basement if you want to contact me you can contact me at my email to Claudio at Linux basement dot com no longer on the social networks and that's for personal reasons but you can find me there and you can find me also on IRC is Claudio M on a cast planet on the free node network and so there you have folks thank you for listening hope you all submit a an episode for Hacker Public Radio as they need as they do need shows very important it's up to us to make sure that Hacker Public Radio stays alive thanks again have a good one bye-bye you have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does our we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself if you ever consider recording a podcast then visit our website to find out how easy it really is Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dark pound and the economical and computer cloud HBR is funded by the binary revolution at binref dot com all binref projects are proudly sponsored by linear pages from shared hosting to custom private clouds go to lunar pages dot com for all your hosting needs unless otherwise stasis today's show is released under a creative commons attribution share a lot