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280 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 370
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Title: HPR0370: How I Found Linux 004
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0370/hpr0370.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 19:11:59
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---
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Do
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Hey everyone, welcome back to Hecker Public Radio.
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I'm Monster B, and this is how I found Lennox Episode 4.
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Enjoy!
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Hi, this is Skirlit Hudson Writer, and I'm a co-host on the Fedora Related podcast.
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I'm going to tell you how I came to find Lennox, um, let's see.
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Well, I'm a graphics designer, and software for that's really expensive, and so basically
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like my major, um, reason for, like, finding Lennox is, like, money, um, it's free, and
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that's awesome.
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And when I heard that you can get these amazing, um, design programs, free of charge, I was
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all over that.
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So I got into Fedora, and I tried to boom to too, but I just really like Fedora and KDE.
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I went to, um, an event that Google had for this, like, big KDE release thing, because
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I was just, like, a started getting into this and realized that the, like, community
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was just a bunch of really, really cool people who are into freedom and, um, and into, like,
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doing something for the sake of doing something cool, and the whole, like, Linux thing is
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just, like, I'm just all about it.
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It's about, like, anarchy, it's about freedom, it's about doing stuff because you want
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to do it, not because, like, someone's paying you to do it, and it's about collaboration
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and ideas and all this amazing stuff, um, yeah, so that's pretty much my story.
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Thanks.
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How I found Lennox.
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This is Nick, and I found Lennox in 1996.
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I found out about Lennox and BSD from a hot tub.
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In late 1995, I met Paul.
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He had a hot tub connected to the internet.
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Paul talked about the power of Unix and the GNU toolset.
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I was completely fascinated with a hot tub that could send and receive email, and I had
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to find out more.
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At the time, real Unix servers had serial green screen consoles, and I needed to have one.
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Free to a good home was the ad on the local log mailing list, and that was a key part
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for me.
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I managed to get a pallet of green screen monitors into my small car.
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I could barely see through the windows, but managed to drive home.
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J from the local log helped me with cable and problems that played me for more than six
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months.
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I was often running with my network of 486 machines and my serial consoles, and I've
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never looked back.
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Uh, good hello, hacker, public radio.
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My name is Six Flop, and this is how I discovered Lennox.
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It was a while ago.
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I don't remember the date exactly, um, but I, for whatever reason, I got to know Lennox
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and I got interested in free BSD, and I wanted to download that and install it.
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I think free, the free part of it kind of sparked my interest, but I never really did, um,
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download it and install it.
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I think the size of it was a little intimidating, it would take a while, and I had mentioned
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this to, um, this father of this person I was dating at the time, because he was in
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tech photography and things like that, and he's like, oh, no, no, no, you use this, and
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he gave me a Lennox CD, believe it was Red Hat 4.2, and I installed that on my laptop
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and used that for a while.
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And at the time, um, a little bit before I was teaching myself C, and I was using Microsoft
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QuickC, and, uh, the Lennox CD that he gave me, uh, came with a nice compiler, and all
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sorts of other things, uh, makes assemblers well, and, uh, all these tools for writing
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things in C, as well as some bunch of search code to things, uh, and so I think that's
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the reason why I kind of stuck with it, uh, when I stuck with, with Red Hat 4 a while,
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um, I got another laptop, I had two laptops, like a, this other laptop a little bit later
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on, and it had a, uh, no CD-ROM drive for anything like that, and so I was looking for a distribution
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that, uh, I could put on to it with its flop, with its floppy drive, excuse me, had a floppy
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drive, and so I came, came across Slackware, and I don't remember what original Slackware
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was, but I put Slackware on that, and, uh, ran the two of those for, for a good long time,
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and, uh, hmm, I actually, uh, got hacked, while ago I had, uh, Red Hat Machine, um, on
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the internet, and PS and Morgan kept on changing, I didn't really know why, uh, and so I
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stringed them, and, uh, some of the symbols, uh, had owned, uh, in front of them own,
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underscore, log in, things like that, so I kind of took that as a cue, probably a pretty
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obvious cue that I've been, uh, in fact, so I switched to something, something else, I
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think at that time I downloaded, uh, Debian, um, I had heard that Richard Stolman used
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it, and I thought, oh, I should use that sometime too, and see what it's like, so I ran Debian,
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um, for a while after that, and I don't remember the details, after that too much, uh, right
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now I mostly, uh, run OpenBSD, as well as Linux, um, on two laptops, I like to have, at
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least two different operating systems, two, uh, running things on, nothing runs the same,
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um, all operating systems, but, uh, that's how we discovered Linux, so, uh, thank you
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for listening, and take care.
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Hi, my name is Nick Oli, I'm part of the Winter Podcast, uh, the Linux C got planted
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in me, probably in the early 90s, the university lab that my dad spent a lot of time in, had
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these Apollo workstations, Apollo had their own proprietary OS, but it was a politics
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compliant, and, but they had a pretty cool front end, and it was pretty nice compared
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to Windows 3.1, which had just come out, Apollo wasn't Linux, but the use of the command
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line to do real work kind of stuck around in the back of my head, my real introduction
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to Linux was, uh, in the fall of 96, or spring of 97, I was a freshman in college, uh, I'd
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gotten this Dell Pentium Pro 200 with NT on it, tinkered, tinkered around with it for a
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while, um, but it really, I didn't care much for it, didn't really hate it or anything,
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but it just didn't get me excited in any way, uh, the computer labs on the other hand
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have these Solaris boxes. Now, they always got me hot and bothered, by the same time I'd
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a friend who started talking to me about Linux and BSD, um, probably have to admit that
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one of the big reasons I started thinking about it was, uh, thought it would be cool to run
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something that nobody else did, um, give me some geek cred, or as my co-host on the Ubuntu
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podcast, Josh Chase says, uh, it's all about the e-cock. Um, so then I kind of started looking
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into getting a copy of Linux and Red Hat was the big distro out there, um, and I just went online
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and ordered, I think it was Red Hat 4.2, uh, CDs, um, and it didn't, it didn't start fine and, uh,
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it was okay, but I couldn't get on the school network because apparently I had a new
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fangled 3-com, 905 ethernet card, and the drivers weren't on the CD, um, but found somebody at NASA
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had actually written drivers and was maintaining drivers for the 3-com, and so in the process of
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getting, trying to get that to run, I learned, you know, just operational basics, just had a mount,
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this, I had a mount the floppy drive from the command line, copying files to it, unmounting,
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um, then came the actual front of building the driver from source, uh, that's kind of when I learned,
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that's when I got introduced to the wonders of mate, configure, make install, and all that, um,
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after I got the driver installed, started learning how to use PINE for email links, uh, just
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to do quick browsing, and, you know, for actually doing homework, learned the wonderful ways of the
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UI, um, after a couple months I still, uh, reinstalled windows, there were too many issues that I just kind
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of figured out, um, but something we would happen, uh, a little bit later, I was taking a class which
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used MATLAB, and the labs that had MATLAB installed on them were running HP's Unix, uh, being lazy,
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like most geeks, I realized that I could export out the display from the live workstations to my
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computer, so Linux went right back on my, uh, machine, but still I could windows back on after
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that semester, there were still things I couldn't figure out how to do, and when I was probably
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stood on my desktop for quite a few years after that, um, Linux was always there in the background,
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as I did tinkering with it on old machines that I got in a hold of, um, I did some sysadmin work,
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which was, uh, Linux or Unix related in some way, after graduating all the server stuff,
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all the server side stuff that I was working on was, uh, pretty much Linux, so Linux was definitely
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there every day, um, probably about four years ago I started looking into using Linux full time
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again, um, had some previous experience with Dibby, and so I gave that a shot, surprisingly, it,
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everything worked right out of the box, um, but there was still a little bit of something missing
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for me, um, it was probably the integration within the desktop, everything worked functionally,
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but, uh, I still needed a little bit more, and eventually, you know, heard the whispers
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about Ubuntu, and the whispers just kept getting louder and louder, and I decided to give it a try,
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um, either around 5.04, or which was Hori, Hedge, something, and, or, uh, 5.10, I think that was
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breezy badger, uh, was the first Ubuntu archive, Hori, Hedgehog, that's it. Um, yeah, I,
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the first, once I gave Ubuntu a shot, that pretty much settled it for me, um, I'm Nick Ali from
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the Ubuntu podcast, we do a video podcast, obviously about Ubuntu, and specifically, what is going
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on in the Ubuntu community, uh, visitors at Ubuntupodcast.net. Oh hi, world, um,
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Christopher Schumaker, I'm a blogger at Giganetworks, Ostatic, and I'm a full-time
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Linux user. I started using Linux way back in the day when Allosaurus roamed the earth, and
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floppy disks needed to be manually mounted in order to be readable. That was about 2001. For reasons
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that remained shrouded in mystery, I had gotten it in my head to build my own computer with two hard
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drives. Two hard drives, of course, beg for two operating systems, but over time, I actually just
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started using one. And that was Linux, and every has things in their life that they can look back
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on and say, ah man, that wasn't supposed to work out that way. And that's kind of me with Linux,
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but actually this is in a good way. I had no idea that I'd like it as much as I did, and that I'd
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find it so handy at work, or that it would eventually become the life saver that it is now.
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When I was able to work in the library, I was working in reference systems, and there were all
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sorts of little syrup dishes ways to sneak open source software into the mix. Open office,
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firefox, again, I seriously stopped the library for paying for a full Photoshop license because
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all they needed to do was resize a picture. Come on. It was moving the public computers to Linux
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that was a massive win for us. The staff had a lot of less hassle in managing the computers,
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and the patrons could safely do a hell of a lot more with them. And most had no idea that they
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weren't on the usual machines, except for those little stray comments like, wow, these computers
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are actually fast, and they don't freeze up anymore. It was actually when I froze up that the whole
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game changed for me. A neurological condition made it impossible for me to work reliably
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at all outside my home, and sometimes it makes it hard for me to work reliably inside my home.
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Linux wasn't, is still a life line for me, and not none, I have a fallen I can't get up kind of
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way. It's actually a lot more than that. While Linux can always just work, it also allows me to
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break it and take it apart, and look at its innards, and just try to stuff it all back together.
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And in those long, agonizing time spans with nothing going on, but Jerry Springer and Judge
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Judy reruns, it kept my brain active and engaged, and it didn't care that I needed to periodically
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lump away and lay there. But then the bizarre part kind of happened. I realized I actually was
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learning in some way about how it worked, and I began writing about it. And then Linux wasn't
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just a single life line, it was a big coax cable thickness knot of life lines like reaching out
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in all directions. I'm still not completely sure how I found Linux. It feels more like it found me
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some days. It's a one unexpected turn though that I am totally okay rolling with.
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How many was taught, occasionally seen around the internet as YoYoNED, and I thought I'd tell you how
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I found Linux. Back in probably 98 or so, I had a friend who was doing some real early work
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with LPA, the Linux Professional Institute, and he was working on their tests. They're helping
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them develop the testing that they did. So anyway, part of his job was obviously he needed to know
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something about Linux, which he did. He was a big computer user, but you know, at the time,
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not never meeting people knew anything about Linux, including himself. So he bought him a 46
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off of eBay, and I started learning Linux and was pretty excited about it. I had just gotten
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basically my first computer at home, and it had Windows 98, just like everything else did back then.
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I quickly learned to use it, enjoyed using a computer, but got really frustrated with
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the instability and couldn't do more than two or three things at a time. Everything you wanted to
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do cost money and I was cheap. So anyhow, he had convinced me to try Linux every time I was
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complaining to him about what my computer was doing. He would say, well, you know, that stuff
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that didn't happen in Linux. So I was real worried about losing any data that I might have. So
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I didn't want to do an installation of Linux. So at the time, there were a few Linux distributions
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that did something similar to what Wubby does now, where you can install Linux, but it lives
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inside a single file on a Windows partition or that partition. So the one I used was called
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Pat Linux, which was spelled PHAT. I need to download it to zip file, extract it, and then
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you boot. When you started Windows, you'd start into DOS mode and run this batch script,
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and then it would boot into Linux and run this file. Well, it was pretty useless.
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I could get X to work after some, well, I could get X to work. I'll just leave it at that,
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but I couldn't get on the internet. I had one of those Windows-only modems, and this was
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long before the days of ALSA. So there was just a handful of sound cards that were supported,
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and Mon wasn't one of them. So no internet, no sound, barely any graphics. So it was stable,
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but it didn't do anything. So I kind of kept up with it with Linux a little bit. I'll talk
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to the guy about it occasionally, and he was trying to get me to do a real installation, and I was
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just too worried about, I didn't want to do any partitioning or anything like that. So anyway,
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at the time, while this was going on, I was in the Navy, and I was getting ready to make a six-month
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deployment. So he was going to lend me a laptop to use while I was on the ship,
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and the laptop he lent me had Red Hat 6.2 on it. I was going to take it with me thinking that,
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I've got six months, I'm going to board out of my mind, I'll be able to learn Linux and
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really get into it while I've got it. So I wanted to have some documentation and some backup,
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software, and stuff like that. So I went to, I don't know, one of the box stores, I don't remember,
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and bought a boxed copy or a box set of Red Hat 7.0. This was early 2001, I don't remember exactly.
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So I bought Red Hat 7.0, I came home and just without any help, the night before I reported
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the ship for good, for six months, I'm sitting in my living room and I'm installing Red Hat 7,
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it came on a disk of like four CDs and it had a, I'm maybe a 50-page installation god.
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And the other thing I bought while I was out was a, I forget the exact name of it, but it was a
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pretty thick Linux book. So I bought that, bought the Linux book, install Red Hat 7, took it on the
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ship, and you know, I spent a lot of time just fooling with it. I learned, I took a collection of
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audio CDs with me, so I learned how to rip CDs with it, convert those CDs into MP3s, I read tons
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and tons of documentation, you know, I learned how to install Linux, I installed it and uninstall,
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or you know, would wipe it out and install it again, I did that a bunch too. Learned about
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gnome and Katie, it was really a good way to learn Linux, I didn't have anything else to do.
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So anyway, by the time I got home, I was, I was familiar enough with it and I was comfortable,
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dual booting, so I went ahead and installed, I think by the time I got home, I may have
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installed that Red Hat, but I remember real specifically using Mandrake a lot, so it was probably my first
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real home installation was Mandrake, probably in 7s or 8s, I don't know exactly, but that's how I found Linux.
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Hi, my name is Lawton Paul. In about 2006, I sort of discovered Linux or Linux kind of discovered
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me when we came together. At the time I was a Mac user and I had been for about 10 years and I
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really loved the Mac and you know, I still do in a way, I mean the interface is beautiful and
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everything just works and all that good stuff you hear about the Mac is true, I think, especially when
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you compare it to Windows, you know. But there was one thing that, and I still do, I do, I build websites
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with my SQL and PHP and Apache and I was doing that happily on the Mac and there was one problem
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though with all of this. One thing that kind of was like a thorn in my little computing world and
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that was I had a perfectly good piece of hardware, but when OS 10 came around, suddenly my hardware
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just wasn't up to snuff, but it was good enough for me and it was good enough to run Photoshop 7
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and everything else I was using, so it kind of annoyed me that I was in this position where I had
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to upgrade the hardware that was the only thing. I mean the macOS was heading in one direction and
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my little computer was being left behind on an island, so I was just kind of frustrating that I
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was being forced, I was in this position where I had no options. And I had even begun to, like, whenever
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I walked past a computer store, I'd look in there and see these, you know, bare bones computers with
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no OS for, you know, a few hundred bucks and they were more powerful than my computer I had and I
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thought, wow, could I, maybe I could use Windows? And I even considered that for a while, but that was
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just, you know, that was just not an option. I really hated Windows at the time, I think I'm a
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little, I'm more, I'm a Linux person now, but I'm less, I'm more computer agnostic, I suppose.
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Anyway, so that's the spot I was in and I just was kind of didn't know what to do, so one day I
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was walking a lunch and out in front of this boutique of all places, there was this computer sitting
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there, just sitting out front with a bunch of junk. And me and my friend walked by and I, of course,
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I saw the spot at the computer and ran over there and asked the lady, you know, what the deal was
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with the computer. She says, oh, it's kind of virus, you know, it's dead, it's that sucker's dead.
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I said, well, you know, I could take it off your hands and sure enough, she's a Windows, she actually
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in the boutique she points over to her husband who's sitting at a, you know, brand new Toshiba laptop or
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something with a smile on his face, so they really didn't want the thing. So I took the computer,
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sure enough, booted it up, did not connect it to the internet and just million pop-ups just,
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you know, came up, you know, it was just amazing to watch, you know, I just was laughing.
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So I, you know, they even gave me the Windows C, so I put the Windows CD and slick the hard drum,
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reinstall the OS and them, I got a perfectly good computer. It's an AMD 1.2 GHz Duron, okay, it's
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not, you know, the fastest thing, but actually that was faster than my Mac at the time. I upgraded
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the RAM and I had a pretty good little box and I used it to test websites on because I was running,
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you know, building websites in a Mac and the worst thing is to, you know, build a, you know,
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spend 10 days, you know, developing the, you know, getting the look just right and then realizing
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it doesn't work on internet explorer, five point, whatever, six point, whatever.
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So anyway, but it just felt bad having that, having Windows, just didn't feel right, you know,
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felt just like, I called it slag box, you know, because I didn't even like the computer,
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because it had Windows on it, but, you know, I gradually used it and, so, you know, I've been hearing
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about this Boone 2 thing, you know, or Boone 2, or whatever. I didn't, you know, I was like, what is
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that? That's some Linux thing. So I, I just been hearing about a lot and kind of kept coming up
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and coming up and so I thought, okay, well maybe I'll try this, you know, maybe that's, that could
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be a solution. And I really came in with no expectations at all. I didn't know what an ISO was,
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I didn't even, you know, I went to, I burned an ISO, or downloaded an ISO, it was dapper 6.06.
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And I got the, got it onto the CD again with absolutely no expectations. It stayed in my bag
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for like a week, forgot about it. And then one day I'm sitting in the computer and I looked
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in my bag and there's the CD and I'm like, what is that? I didn't even remember what it was.
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And I put it in the, in the computer. And I remember, oh, that's the, you know, that's the Linux CD.
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And so I booted, rebooted the computer and installed Linux and amazingly, it installed.
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I, of course, you know, there's always little problems. I didn't have, I couldn't record audio.
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I could hear audio, but couldn't record audio. And that was, you know, that actually as problems
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go, that wasn't, that wasn't very big at all. I was off to the races. I ended up installing
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Zubin 2XF CE4 and it just, it worked. And I was, I couldn't believe it. You know, here I was.
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I had this, this operating system that was elegant and fast and there was so many options.
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And that was the thing that really made it for me. It's like, I did have an off. Suddenly,
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I had options. You know, I could go, you know, KDE and have all the, you know, how should I put
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this nicely, all of the stuff that comes with KDE or I could go super minimal like I wanted to do,
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you know, and, and, and run, you know, I don't know, at the time I didn't know about it, but I could
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run open box or whatever. I ended up on Zubin 2 and the thing just worked. And what I did was I got
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a KVM switch, which I could switch and I hooked it up to them between the Mac and the Linux box.
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And then I could just press a little button and go to the Mac when I needed to and press the button
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again and boom, I'm back in the Linux. And I just left it that way for about, about six months.
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And in that six month period, I just, I used the Mac less and less. And the only thing, of course,
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here we go, here's the old story. The only thing that sold me back is Photoshop. So I'd build a
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website. I got, I got everything going on the Linux box, you know, and the, the, the Apache minus
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QLP of course, you know, it was just, it was just wonderful, you know, and it was fast. It worked
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well. And I didn't have any problems. I didn't, you know, of course, there's no virus issues.
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I just, you know, too good to be true. And so I had the KVM switch set up and it just got to the
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point where I never even pressed the button anymore. I just stayed in Linux. My wife just kind of took
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over the Mac and all of my, you know, a website building duties just went to Linux. And I'm still
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there now. I don't have Photoshop, but maybe I got to get so we're good to go. And so anyway. So that's
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my story. Oh, and thanks, Monster B. That was a cool idea. I hope this wasn't boring. Peace out.
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All right, episode four. If you like to be part of episode five, please send an audio clip to
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Monster B at Linux cranks.info. And remember, it doesn't, there is no time limit. So it could be
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one minute or an hour. It doesn't matter. Just send it to me. It can be in a wave,
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aug, flag, or even an MP3. Well, I hope to hear from you. And thanks for listening to Hacker Public
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Radio. See you.
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You
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