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134 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
134 lines
9.2 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 593
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Title: HPR0593: My Linux Experience
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0593/hpr0593.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 23:38:34
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---
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You
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Hi, my name is Jared.
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I recently heard a HPR episode asking for people to contribute, and I've listened to
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a lot of episodes, so I thought I'd give it a whirl.
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One of the suggestions was asking to talk about how you first got into Linux.
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So I'll give that a shot.
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Back in the mid-90s, I was in college at RPI, Rensler Polytechnic Institute.
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I was majoring in biochemistry and biophysics.
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Most of my roommates were engineers.
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About half of those guys had their own personal computers.
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Back then, nobody had laptops, and the school's computer network was Unix-based.
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There were computer labs all over the campus, and to survive, you had to learn how to operate
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in a Unix environment.
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My freshman roommate, and some of my other later roommates, had played around with Linux.
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Of course, this is back in pre-Windows 95 days, so I moved from Windows into playing on Linux.
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First machine that I actually owned, I got in the late 1998, had Windows 98 on it, and
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I had a version of Red Hat that I had dual boot, and I split time between both of those.
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There was always some kind of problem that I was having, trying to get X to work right
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on that cheap-ass machine, but I was able to use it well enough.
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Second machine that I had was a dual boot with Windows 2000 and a version of Mandrake
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that was out at the time.
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First everything on that one worked very well.
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For no good reason, I seemed to spend more time in Windows 2000 than I did in Linux.
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Third machine that I have that I'm using now currently, I played around with a version
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of Ubuntu called Super OS, and the Windows 7 Beta, which has since expired, but at the
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time was free, and now I'm mostly using the Mint release of Ubuntu Linux almost all
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the time.
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Pretty much the only thing I can't do besides play-old games, which I wouldn't really be doing
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anyways, is mess around with creating playlists on my Creative Zen MP3 player, because their
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software is Windows XP only, and so I get that done at work anyway on a Windows XP machine.
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Professionally I'm a scientist that worked at a biotech company called Veridex.
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Years back, I was on a project for more than five years where we developed an automated sample
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processor for a blood-based cancer analysis test.
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That machine was Linux-based, Mandrake, something or other.
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I didn't do any software, or any firmware development.
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I wrote scripts on top of all that stuff, but we used the directory structure to keep
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things organized, so we had descriptive path names and file names that were really, really
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useful for keeping everything straight.
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I had some basic command-line skills back from the Unix days and other ones that I had picked
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up, and using basic text editors to write these scripts that made the instrument a thing
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advanced.
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At that company we also had a sample analysis instrument that originally started out as
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Windows 2000, but was moved to a Linux platform, and I may give a talk or two about some
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of the technology that was there.
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Anyway, back to Linux at home.
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Most of the applications that I use most of the time, I have it set up with just a typical
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default GNOME desktop environment, use Firefox, Mozilla Firefox, for all web surfing that
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I do.
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All my email now is web-based, but I used to use Thunderbird in the past.
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All the documents stuff, all the office documents that I have to deal with, I use Google Docs
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for, but I've used OpenOffice in the past, which works well.
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For pictures, I keep them on Picasso, Google Picasso account, and there's a good Linux
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Picasso app for wrangling all the pictures together.
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For keeping track of podcasts and other RSS stuff, I use a Sage plugin for Firefox, which
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works pretty well.
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There's a lot of manual stuff involved, but at least you know where things are going to
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go when it's going to happen.
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VLC and Movie Player for listening to music and watching movies, used a mirror a little
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bit, just because they had different content, it had feeds for TED Talks and some other
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stuff.
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That was interesting.
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I haven't used that in a while, but it is an interesting application.
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I use Transmission for BitTorrents, G-Edit, and Edit for Simple Text File, Editing, XScreen
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Saver pops up when I'm not here, and I use the Linux version of Skype a couple times.
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Back in the day, when I was a little bit more creative, I messed around with using the
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Gimp to start and screw around with pictures.
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I used to make wallpapers and stuff years back.
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I had run Apache and FTP servers on a machine at home just so I would have access and other
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file sharing things mostly for pictures or hosting music files I could listen to remotely.
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I definitely use Ubuntu, whatever it is, but the package manager for any software upgrades
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and installs keeps things very simple.
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I try not to install too much on my own manually, although every once in a while I have to do
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that.
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You know, TAR and ZIP and the whole deal there, figuring out dependencies, but I try to
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stay away from some of that stuff.
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This Linux and really Ubuntu in general handles USB drives and partitions very, very well.
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The stuff like that is simple to use as a little bit of work when I pull pictures from
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my camera.
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I have a six-year-old digital camera, so getting pictures off of that is sometimes manual
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and then it just figuring out the folder structure for how it stores them, but a little bit
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of wrangling, a little bit of file name manipulation, and it squares all that away.
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I don't have a printer or scanner, so I don't deal too much with peripheral stuff, but
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I've seen in the past that stuff works pretty well.
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I do have two monitors going with a graphic one graphics card and setting that up was
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trivially easy, and I'm recording this with Audacity, so I was able to figure that out
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hopefully.
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Every once in a while I'll dig through the package manager list of applications and try
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different things, some of them game, some of them interesting sounding applications, nothing
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really life-changing that I've ever found, but I'm always up for interesting suggestions.
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Some of the actual Linux skills that I use at home, every once in a while in application
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gets hung up, they have to dig around, find the process number, and kill it manually.
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That's fairly easy to do, like I said, Taryn Zippen, usually not for installing software,
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but for old things that I have archived away from previous work, previous machines, I'll
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collect it together, just every once in a while, I'll tell you some of the things that
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I like about Linux besides it being free, and I don't really have the Linux as free
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if your time has no value problems, some people seem to do, now if you're trying to stress
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it a little bit more, I can understand that it's easy to run into problems, but boy recent
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modern distributions of Linux are incredibly easy to run, even installing it is an over
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my head, I can set up partitions, you know, have to pay attention a little bit, but it's
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not overly complicated, and damn near everything that I do at home, I can, there's applications
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for that I can run, you know, all the entertainment stuff, information, you know, whatever else
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it is, is all right there, I also will carry around one of the, or two of the distributions
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of Linux on a CD, and if my work laptop doesn't cooperate when I travel with wireless
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or with whatever, I can quickly flip into a live Linux CD and everything seems to work
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well, if I have my preference, I'd run it all the time, but it's not my machine and
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it's not my network, so I've got to follow rules at work, and if I ever dig up all games
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or play new games, I've just get a copy of Windows, make a new partition or get a new
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hard drive and play, so if I ever get back into that, that would be the move, I've never
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really converted anybody successfully into using Linux at home for real, I do know some
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people who, when the Mac OS 10 came out years back that was more or less unique space
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that some people flipped to that, I've gotten some people, some, some Windows people to
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mess around for short time using Linux on home machines, but not all the way and definitely
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not full time, about me, I'm not a programmer, I'm not an IT guy, a professional IT guy,
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maybe have some above average computer experience, but I'm not an engineer, but I can handle
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Linux well enough to be happy and sometimes it cooperates, most of the time it cooperates
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with things that I want to do, I'm not really apprehensive about trying different stuff
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or even really too nervous about losing everything that I have, which I think might be a sticking
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point with some people, so I'm not afraid to try some of these things and get them to
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work, anyway, there was a little about me, I said my name is Jared, if you want any questions
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about anything I'm doing or other suggestions, please get a hold of me, I said I'm also professionally,
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I'm a cell biologist, I was thinking about doing some talks on that, I used to do pet
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and work, I'm a registered pet and agent, I was thinking about doing a talk about that,
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I coached lacrosse, for some local teams, I was thinking about talking about that, and
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I help high school kids build robots with the first robotics program, and I was thinking
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about doing some talks about that, so thanks for listening and hope you enjoyed it.
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So head on over to CARO.18 for all of the team.
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