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136 lines
11 KiB
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136 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1133
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Title: HPR1133: How I got in to Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1133/hpr1133.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:33:21
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---
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Want to do something different this coming New Year's Eve?
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Want to make some new friends, share some laughs and give something back to the community?
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Then please come along and join in with a Hacker Public Radio New Year's Eve show,
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a 24-hour Ogcast marathon.
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We're running for the full 24 hours starting from Monday, December 31st at 1200 UTC.
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I'll be there and I really want to spend my New Year's Eve getting to know you too.
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Four participation details are available at www.hackerpublicradio.org.
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Hello my name is Dick Thomas, you can find my blog at www.expd259.co.uk.
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I've been listening to Hacker Public Radio for about six months now and I'm loving every show
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and I was just checking out the website and it appears that requested topics are how you got
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into Linux and how did you get into Linux geeked them. So I thought I'd do a quick podcast on that.
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So where to start? I think where should start is my first computer.
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I was about eight years old so that makes it around 1989, 1988 and it was a ZX Spectrum Plus 3.
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This was my very first computer, it was an 8-bit Z80 CPU and it was an awesome introduction
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to computers before the Mac and PC was affordable really for a home PC.
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It used basic and I learned how to program basic and did really well in it and even learned some
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machine gold. I can't remember anything now except 10 go to 10 print 10 and all that rubbish.
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My favourite game was our type which sadly you can't legally acquire from the
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Spectrum archive repositories and so I've had to resort to an Xbox version which isn't quite
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the same playing it on the Xbox 360s, it was playing it on the Spectrum. I used that machine until
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I was about 15 when I took it apart and blew it up and then a family friend lent me his laptop
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which I subsequently broke using double space to try and double the amount of hard drive space
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available to me. I broke it by not letting it run all the way and then I had to manually run it
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stop it, copy over some files, delete the files and it was just a pain in the ass.
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So I learned lots of system commands in DOS and this was running Windows 3.11 for work groups.
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It was a first experience for me using DOS and I learned so much so I'll always be thankful to
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him for lending me that computer even though I did break it by him. My first computer of my
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own I got one hour 16, I got a part-time job just to pay for the thing, saved up 200 pounds
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went to a computer market, bought a computer and it was a 33 megahertz with a turbo button
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to 66 megahertz. It had four mega RAM and a 150 megabyte hard drive and I believe it was running
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Windows 95 which I bought at the time. I also had internet access which was new and novel for me.
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At this point I started learning how to make web pages,
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staying up all night, reading everything I've possibly could about making web pages.
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This was before HTML4 I think, but I'm not sure so don't quote me on that.
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I remember I used front page because I didn't know HTML but we digress.
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I stayed with this computer for a few years until I was about 16 when I moved to Cornwall
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that's in southern England and I live in the north of England. It's about seven hours journey.
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I was at a police auction and I found a copy of Windows NT4 that came with a legitimate serial key
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so I bought that for an extortion at £2 which was about $3.50 and I really loved that
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NT was more secure than Windows 95 was. Not much more secure but more secure.
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I stayed with this for a few years but I wasn't quite satisfied with it
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and the quality of the software wasn't particularly great. In 1991 Linux was released as we all know.
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I heard about it but I had no idea how to get it or how to use it or anything.
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In 1997 a PC magazine that I bought had an article about Linux and how it was going to become big.
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This caught my interest but the magazine didn't come with any kind of CD1 and it just gave a link
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to I think Slackware and I just didn't have the dialogue capability to download all those floppy
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disks and make working copies of the floppy disks and then I had no idea how to partition safely
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and I didn't want to break my then girlfriend's Windows installation just so I could play with
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this exciting new toy that I found about but I kept an eye on it. In 1999 I came across
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Coral Linux on a book so I bought the book, put the CD rom in the drive, there was no downloading
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and it was just good to get on without the downloading. Unfortunately it was a painful experience,
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almost no hardware worked out of the box. I was limited to the command line. It took six months
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to get a X11 display working in VGA mode but it got me interested in free software and it got me
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interested in Linux. Unfortunately I had to give up on that because the printer didn't work
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or even on the Windows I think there was something wrong with it hardware-wise. It had been dragged
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from one end of the country to the other and with no internet connection under Linux it was
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impossible to memorize all the commands I needed to try reboot and then try them under Linux
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and then reboot back to Windows to look for another answer or another
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permutation of the commands I needed so I gave up again unfortunately. In about 2000 while living
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in London's working as a chef I had access to an internet cafe so I downloaded Mandrake Linux
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burnt it to a CD and played with that. I got 3D acceleration working and I was so happy that I could
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now play Tux Racer and over 3D games on my Linux box that I actually deleted Windows off the machine
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and stuck with Linux. Unfortunately after about six months in London I could no longer tolerate the
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lifestyle down there. People were just too rude and too busy so I packed up, moved back to Yorkshire
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and I lost the CD but at the time I didn't really care because I had a working system and I didn't
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think anything would go wrong. Much to my horror about six months later the computer failed to boot
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and I didn't have a Windows CD, I didn't have a Linux CD so I was stuck with this dead computer
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and I didn't know what to do so I went out and bought a copy of I think Windows XP maybe.
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This was about 2002 but while I was in PC World the computer store I also spotted a boxed Linux
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of Susie so I bought that as well, it was about $70.00 and got a cup of tea and it was about $9.00 so
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I'm really enjoyed. Hello and welcome to the hacker company. I'm your host the hacker community
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and with me tonight is Foxy but I touched or a man has tried in his home and has been
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raid neglected computers. A group of teenagers use an host to steal government's secrets.
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PGP drive encryption using only eight dungeons and dragons 20 sided die and finally we'll talk
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with my snag dog about the perfect egg salad recipe. That's Monday through Friday on hacker.
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Public radio only on hackerpublicradio.com
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Okay, got a cup of tea feeling quite fresh now. Where were we?
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At this point I was still using XP and Linux, most Linux for fun and games and browsing the internet
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protects p for my college work. I finished college, I then moved into my own house and my next
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our neighbor was one of the gen 2 developers so after an epic system crash or a virus infection
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or hard drive failure and lost all my documents I no longer had any reason to keep the Windows partition
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so he helped me install gen 2 and configure everything, get Nvidia graphics working,
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set up Wi-Fi, set up a server with my own mail server basically he could do anything as a complete
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utter star. Total geek but a star. I really love gen 2 it was everything I imagined Linux to be
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was free was open software is available at a huge repository but unfortunately as I moved to an AMD
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64 machine at that time the unstable branch was more stable than the stable branch so many things
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didn't work and I wanted to stick with 64 bits and help report bugs but the constant errors
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huge build times like open office could take two or three days to build
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bad politics flaming when you tried to report a book I just gave up on it these things have
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improved so I've been told but at the time I just couldn't be bothered anymore with the hassle
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so I looked around for a new distribution at this point I also got rid of Windows
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this was 10 years ago now I've used since then used various distributions but I settled on Ubuntu
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because that's what other people at the look we're using in leads so I had some supports there
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and I've never used Ubuntu or a Debian distribution before but it just worked and I liked that
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and I used it for maybe two or three versions and then Unity happened and while many people do love
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Unity I love gnome and gnome 3 so I wasn't happy with that so I distro hopped again I must have
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gone through everything from open suze Linux Mint Fedora BSD I finally settled on Debian
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I thought why use a Debian derivative when I could use Debian itself and I didn't need any
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handholding after using open suze after using Ubuntu even and my gen 2 experience helped with
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the command line stuff so I'm now a fully paid up member of the Debian fan club it's on my
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HP microserver I've got a trute on my net galaxy nexus it's on my desktop it's on my laptop
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it's basically on everything that I can get my group of little hands on I've also contributed
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financially to the Debian handbook which reached its liberation goal so you can download the Debian
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handbook for free from Debian hyphen handbook.info as can be the PDF or an e-bub
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I also now make videos for Dix installs on youtube promoting free software and Linux distributions
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I show the installation from downloading on the website to the review of the desktop which I
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do not for any of a reason then to help promote the Linux that I love since I can't code very well
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and book reports are a bit fewer and far between because I don't really know how to
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explain the bug and I do find them so you can find those on youtube I'm also learning c and gtk
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for the purpose of writing a screen capture program because at the moment I'm using a bash script
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I created using Zenity I also am learning how to use git and bash for the purpose of improving my
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Linux skills and my command line food and this is brings us up to date where I'm a Debian user and
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happy with it I run weasy I have quite a powerful machine so I enjoy the gnome 3 interface and
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it works very well with my workflow on my laptop I use xfce because my laptop is quite a few years old
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but I'm happy glad I've not used windows for 10 years I do have a virtual machine with windows 7 on
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it but I've installed it and I've never used it since I do use some proprietary software
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such as Spotify but that's only because there isn't a open source alternative as far as I know
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so that's it thank you for listening I hope you've enjoyed this and thank you for listening to
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H.O.P.L.G Radio
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you have been listening to H.O.P.L.G radio at H.O.P.L.G radio does our
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