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108 lines
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Plaintext
108 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 115
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Title: HPR0115: Promoting Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0115/hpr0115.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 11:37:03
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---
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Thank you so much.
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Hello my name is Ken Dall and welcome to this edition of Hacker Public Radio.
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Sorry for the sound quality and this one again I'm using my portable MB3 recorder.
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Today is going to be a little talk about promoting Linux and not the LBI certification course.
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I'll be doing another LBI certification course this month and I'll be doing a changing
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tack a little bit, found some interesting documentation following my appeal for more
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information last month loads of people have responded and I've got some good resources
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that we can use to hopefully speed along the process of doing the LBI certification.
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Okay as I said before today's topic is about promoting Linux.
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Now a lot of people want to know how they can give back to the community,
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some people do source code development, other people want to do documentation and other people
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try to do podcasts which of course is a very good way to promote Linux and if you want to do a
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podcast and are thinking about it but don't have a topic feel free to come along and help out
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with the LBI certification track and shameless plug. However quite a lot of you if you listen to
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this year of the hacker mentality and not only that but most people who are of the hacker mentality
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tend to get asked to do computer related tasks for a friend and family. Now this means
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even if you're a Linux guy you sometimes are fixing PCs for people with windows and people with
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max and that sort of thing. Now in the course of these repairs you are going to probably be
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purchasing more equipment, memory, hard disks, video cards and that sort of thing then your normal
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job low on the street. Now as all good Linux people know places like LinuxDevices.com and
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Linux Hardware and the LinuxQuestions.org Hardware section will give you loads of information
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on the right type of hardware to purchase and naturally over the years you've know you've learned
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to check these sites out and be 100% sure that the hardware you're going to purchase will work on
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Linux before you purchase it. Now what I'm about to say now is more when you're going into a lot of
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people buy stuff online so this isn't really relevant but when you're going into shops,
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computer shops, I don't know, like media marketing or dixons or fries or something like that
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can compute or say whatever. When you're buying anything and I mean absolutely anything if it's a
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CD but a stack of blank CDs if it's memory, if it's a hard disk, if it's anything be sure to go
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to the information desk and ask will this product work with Linux. Now you ask this even though you
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know in your mind that it will 100% guaranteed work with Linux you will ask this every single time
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every single time you will ask this and you will say to them if they don't know then you will
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reply back to them saying and what is your return policy and can I return it if it doesn't work
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with Linux and they will probably have to go and ask the manager but most doors have no questions
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ask return policy where you return it within somebody days. Now I go down to my local computer shop
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I walk in and I buy some RAM I know that they have a return policy I ask will it work for Linux
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the first time I started doing this they answer was we don't know both I'll have to check
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and they go and they look up and now I have been trained so that anytime I walk in they
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look at the back of the thing and they'll see the tux logo and they go yes it does work with Linux
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so now in their mind in that one store there are conscious of the fact that they have customers
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who work with Linux now that's all very well you think and well I buy most of my stuff online
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well do exactly the same thing if there's options for load form if there's a questions about
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the product fill it out can you confirm that this product will work with Linux and if it doesn't
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along do I have to return it be sure and always do this and the reason we're doing this is to say
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we are people in the Linux community we have hard cold cash in fact we probably have more hard
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cold cash accessible to us largely because we're repairing PCs for people on other environments
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now you message yourself there's a bit dishonest because I'm repairing Windows PC and I want to make
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sure that the printer and buying works with Linux well you're not because you're making that
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PC future proof if somebody if a manufacturer has taken the time to provide Linux drivers
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they more than likely also have Mac drivers and they also more than likely have good Windows drivers
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and this just makes it a more supportive product that they care about their product now if you're
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in the business environment and you're responsible for doing quotations or specifying equipment
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are you talking to vendors even if you're when if you're a Windows shop with 100% Linux server or
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Windows servers I mean 100% 6p on the desktop 100% whatever you should always ask what sort of support
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do you have for Linux or other other other environments so Mac or BSD and this will guess
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the sales guy thinking for start might not know what Linux is and you go well we're not
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intending and implementing it but we want to leave our options open now management ask you
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why you're doing this and say you put it now to quotation you should always try and guess into
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the quotation you usually have requests it must do this it must do that and then nice to have what
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you're trying to do is you're trying to get on that sheet of paper nice to have is Linux support
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and you say to management if they say well why are we doing this you say well we want to make sure
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that we're leaving our options open so that in the future we're open and supported if a company
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is supporting Linux it means they generally have more support staff available and therefore
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that is that means that their Windows support will be a lot better if they're supporting Linux
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they have a bigger customer base which means we're more secure in buying that product so you can
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convince management that is a good thing to do and what that does is put in Linux on the radar
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it's saying people who make purchases are using Linux people are thinking about using Linux so
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if they're coming back when people bring the sales dudes in and they're working on the strategy
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for the coming year they will ask them you know what what do you see coming up and they'll say
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well we see a lot of people are asking about Linux they're wondering do we have Linux support
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yet yet yet now if you're talking to these people and they say well we don't have Linux support
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then what you do is you say you do know that there's a team within the Linux community that will
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develop your drivers for free essentially you don't have to do anything except point them in
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the right direction and there again you're promoting the use of Linux you're making it an
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everyday thing you're making it that it's coming up on every sheet of documentation so if you
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are there working in a in a Windows only shop and you're frustrated by the fact that you're not
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bringing Linux in well here's how you can do it from the ground up because if you bring in questions
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about Linux into sales people and everybody else listening to this do it then the product specifications
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when they come out with next year's brochure there will be a tiny little thing that says
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also supports Linux and then your manager will say oh that dude who was working down in the
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in the balls of our IT department was on about support for Linux and I see this product supports
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Linux so it must be a good product and there again we're supporting the whole idea that Linux
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is something that they that she must be right because I see it in the product brochure and you
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just keep chipping away keep bringing up the word Linux also if you're if your family are thinking
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of buying a computer with Linux on it suggest that they give it a try put a dual boot in don't force
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it on them any chance you get to do interviews or talking to salespeople try and inject the word
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Linux in there as a sort of buy the buy sort of a thing I've waffled on a little bit too much now
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and just remember every time we purchase something you're spending money that can be attributed
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to the Linux column even if you happen to be buying it for Windows and Mac I'd encourage
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everybody to do that it's one good way of helping the community without actually having to be
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that technical or whatever so make sure you allow a little bit of extra time when you're going
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out to make your purchases to allow for that okay and the next time you're here for me we'll be
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talking about PC expansion cards on the Linux certification I've been told that team working
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on the Linux audio section for the LPI certification no pressure no pressure but if you could have
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it soon that would be great and like to know an episode on modems for the LPI certification so
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that'd be cool looking forward to that speeden up later on this month anyway ladies and gentlemen
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this has been another exciting and fulfilled episode of hacker public radio have a good day
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thank you for listening to hacker public radio HPR sponsored by caro.net so head on over to
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so
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you
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You
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