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147 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
147 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1841
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Title: HPR1841: My way into Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1841/hpr1841.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:58:51
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---
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This is HPR episode 1,841 entitled, My Way into Linux, and in part of the series, how I found Linux.
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It is posted my first time post-focus, and in about 10 minutes long, the summary is,
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from punch card to mandaro.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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How I got into Linux. Table of contents. One preface to early times, free Commodore,
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and Atari 4 Macintosh 5 Debian, and beyond. One preface. Hi, I'm Fokie, English isn't my mother
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tongue, so forgive the third time doing to the language. As this is my first distribution
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to the HPR I will take up, the fine tradition to do a more or less short talk about my way
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into, and with Linux. And for the more I'm taking the opportunity to test how well
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these speakers do in replacing my voice with its heavy German accent.
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Two early times. I was born and raised up in Eastern Germany. All my contacts to the computerized
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world until 1989 are a little bit behind what you would have been the Western world.
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My first contact to bits and bites were a visit to the so called,
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part of the brigade of my school class sometime in the middle of the 1980s that happened
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to be the IT department on our biggest local industry fabric.
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Now we saw big big things all along the wall, and in the middle of the room a tiny black
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white monitor, and another big thing that was handling some kind of cards sliding from one end
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on this big thing to the other, and on the way, you guessed right.
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They were still working with bunch cards to store one month's wage for an employee on,
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but we didn't know that this one out of time technology, and I thought that is cool.
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We could type in our names on the keyboard on the board with the monitor, and magically
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there came a card with goals on some positions, and now a name written in plain text on the head
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on the card out of the thing in the middle of the room, and I learned about the coding in
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zeros, and ones that the goals are representing.
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But I called and lived out in this fascination more than to have fun writing down zeros,
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and ones representing numbers, and charging some kind on ask it I suppose.
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Free Commodore, and Atari.
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The next time I touched a computer were when a friend having relatives in Western Germany
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got a Commodore 64, it was astonishing.
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A real-life computer not even the size of the keyboard I've seen in the earlier described
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visit to our part of the brigade connected to a TV set in the house of an angry teenager.
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I spent hours, and hours with this friend, and his miracle device.
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Mostly we played games, but also fun programming nonsense in basic.
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You know, the usual 10 print something 20-0-10, and some base levels right moving to.
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After the fall of the wall my parents gave me the greatest premon timer until then.
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A broader Commodore 128 from a first visit to friends on the other side.
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I nearly choked my farmer with my delight hugs.
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Now I don't all the fun things I did before with my friend by myself,
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and only a short time after some of my classmates got their Commodore's too, and we could skip discs.
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But again we nearly only played games.
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One day shortly after I attended gymnasium, the German secondary school,
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a older cousin being a must teacher wondered why I'm still using such a play toy,
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instead of a real computer, and gave me an outdated Atari mega-resty.
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Today you will laugh about this kind of distinction between those two,
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but in this time I saw it this way too.
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I began to use my Atari for the more usual use cases of a computer in a home.
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I wrote essays for school on it to the bewildering of my language teachers still
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and used to printed texts from pupils.
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I began building a database on my musical collection, and of course I also played on this.
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And I began to program a little bit again.
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I tried to write a program to calculate tables on the different soccer leagues
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for a friend owning Atari too, and interested in such sports.
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The result was unsatisfying, but I enjoyed the process though.
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4 Macintosh
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In 1993 I began university studies, and succeeded to convince my parents that I need a new computer
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at working tool, but I didn't want a winter computer, because all I've seen of those
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times were disgusting to me.
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I attended a computer course under one year in secondary school using a Macintosh classic,
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and that was what I wanted.
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So I bought a Apple Macintosh Performer 450, one Prouder short time, and then upset,
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because only two weeks after the newer 475 was released to nearly the same price.
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That was the first time I experienced this short time cycle on computer releases we are used
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to today. I soon learned my lesson. It's no use to look at the market the next weeks when
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you just bought hardware. You always will find you bought the wrong time.
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Now I want satisfied for years. I want a Apple user my heart.
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Mac OS was my operating system my choice. I laughed about all those the MSDS and Windows users
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having hard times when I just used my devices. Yes, I had problems, because there was so much
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in hard and software that was incompatible to my beloved Macs, but I could live with that.
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You know my Macintosh's were still niche products. I liked the system that was serving me, instead
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of me serving it. In the end of the 1990s a friend of mine from the time of Komodia,
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and Atari that got my old C128 for more use than I did on it, he really programmed on it in
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assembly code, now having a con computer, does anyone remember those, tried installing some
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strange thing called Linux. He spent it to compile, and I only shook my head not understanding
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what use all the running text and children. I thought this shows only once more what kind
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of lovely strange nerd he was, but he didn't say the only one. A friend too, and another one
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began to look at this Linux. But not me, I had my Mac OS, built to serve me, not me too,
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you know the phrase. Then came the time when I needed to write long texts with an happy
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mixture of that in precand Hebrew words. It was hard to do this in the usual word processor,
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I was using, and it was annoying to get all such things as footnotes. I'm a lot of it,
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in the scene and table of content to work properly, and one of those friends recommended that he
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X to do this. He gave me a short introduction, and I won impressed by the mic on the source.
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I installed some RTX distribution on my iMac I owned Mac then, don't remember which.
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The first text I wrote this way looked good and I switched to writing all printout texts in
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RTX soon, even let them to friends and family. And one using RTX known about the learning
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curve, and often visited this friend driving problem out of the way. On this occasion I saw
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how he could work much more effective in the shell and on my so-be-loved mouse driven system.
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So I became more and more sush new year eggs, sush to try this myself.
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One day he took the occasion, and talked about something called dual-root, and that he wanted to
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test Linux on PowerPC too, because he used the usual X86. I'm ambient, and beyond.
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So on a spring evening of 2001 we packed my iMac in a car, and drove to our faculty,
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where another friend, who wants to turn over his working room so that we could download all the
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software we needed directly to my computer. At night my iMac became a ambient machine and I never
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looked back. First the process was a pain in the rust. The Macintosh keyboard lacked some keys we
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needed, so I bought an extra keyboard with all we needed. The ILO setup was a mystery we solved
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by reading manuals, and FAQ on the other machine we could not hand. Also the graphical,
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and audio setup was all pretty easy, but now I wanted it done not to stop.
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When the sun went up again, literally, we had succeeded, and went to bed, tired, but lucky.
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The following time I used my ambient partition for testing, and writing at the X-Tex,
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and otherwise macOS with all the programs installed there. But that shifted soon to all
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ambient GNU sush Linux, and only games under macOS. By the way, we talked macOS iMac and
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ambient potato for more than minus time, as far as I remember it. First I learned more,
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and more to use the shell, and then I'm out in the philosophy driving the GNU project.
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The moment I understood the floss concept, I wanted to move over to the free world by heart,
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more than I ever was a mac user by heart. Some years later after getting my own mums,
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but didn't get any employment I switched past and took a course in programming in another town,
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and needed something more handy than my iMac. So I bought a Dell Inspire with Windows XD pre-installed.
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I didn't delete this crapware, because some part of the course handled with it, and I wanted to
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have something, if I should get something like home lectures. But otherwise it wasn't GNU,
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and Linux I wanted to use. First I thought I'm out installing ambient on this machine too,
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but remembering the problems we had in 2001 I decided to test the new kid on the block called Ubuntu,
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at least it was derived from ambient. To my surprise all worked from the start. I once sold,
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and became a devotee. I lasted until Unity, and some other signs that Canonical no longer listened
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to the users. This way I got a distro and desktop environment hopper. First I thought Ubuntu,
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or Ubuntu could be the compromise, but once being in the mood for testing, and exploring
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I looked around a little bit more, and over the time on some years I used ambient again,
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Sparky, GNU instead, Mint and Bond high. Some gave all the talk about Archon nearly
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and Ritec podcast I was listening to, not me to see over the fence on the deviant remates,
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and I gave it a chance. But I must admit Archon itself was a little bit too much for me,
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being our family favor I had and to the time, and patience to go so deep into installing,
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and configuring. I searched for a compromise. The first attempt, one Archon on an old IBM
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dated 2004. That worked quite well as a game machine for my eldest son, but for my every day
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laptop I wanted something a little bit more, and just in time came a little hype over Mandaro
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Linux. I installed a third boot option in addition to Mint, and Bond high, and now I've been
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using it for at least two years. It suits me exactly. You get a good compromise between stable,
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and fresh software, and being part of the Arch family you can use there you are to get nearly
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all there is. I think it's time to round up. I hope you didn't get too bored about my distro hopping,
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otherwise you could get something similar about my desktop in my remit hopping, just joking.
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Have a good time, and I'm a known HPR Meta and would say, don't forget to support free software.
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You've been listening to HackerPublicRadio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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