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103 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
103 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 752
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Title: HPR0752: My Path to Linux: Knoppix
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0752/hpr0752.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:54:03
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---
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No, no.
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Good morning. Good afternoon. Good evening. It is Mr. Gadgets and the next installment of
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my path towards Linux. And some of you might be saying, who is actually going to get to
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running Linux? And believe me, it's been a long path, but this is the one where I actually
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start running Linux on a regular basis. I was looking out there while over at the barf
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you enjoyed to pick up some stuff for dinner. And I looked out on Mr. Gadgets.logspot.com,
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which is also linked to Mr. Gadgets.com. And that's my blog, which I have been running since,
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I don't know, 2003, at least, I guess, or something like that. I didn't go back to the
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very beginning, but I did look for, so the specific thing, and the first entries that I could find
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out there, was March of 2004. Back then, I was carrying around a work lab top that was an
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IBM think pad. They were still from IBM back then. T20. And that was getting a little long in
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the tooth at that particular time, and in terms of the dog years, that are computer years.
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But that was my work machine. And it was having some problems that I blogged about in this,
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March entry of 2004. And I mentioned that what was I going to do to actually recover the data
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on this because it had thrown a blue screen of death. And I was going to get a new machine ordered
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in the process here. And I was using the first Linux distribution that I started using on a
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regular basis. And that was graphics. So sometime previous to 2004. And I don't know where I found
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out about graphics. This is the very first, you know, early days of podcasting. So I didn't
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heard about it on a podcast, or it could just be on a website and things that I was looking at
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things out there. But somewhere along the line, I found out about this new live CD. And this
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is a totally new concept. Instead of going through the installs, which I tried back into the 90s,
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and I was always doing this on laptops. And laptops have always been more difficult for Linux,
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at least until more recent days here. But back in this time period, laptops were really difficult
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for Linux to get everything running and everything working, you know, as it should be. And supposedly,
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this Mopix thing would detect hardware load what it is that they needed to run. And it was supposed
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to be just the best thing to supply spread. So I tried it. I don't know whether I got a live CD,
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you know, from a magazine, which, you know, since not all of us had high-speed data, you know,
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to the home and all that kind of stuff, it was still a lot of the sources of these things.
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It might have been in a maximum PC, you know, a CD that was included or an actual Linux magazine,
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but somewhere along the line, I got a copy of Mopix and I stuck it in the drive and I booted it up.
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And it was golden. It was like, oh my gosh, you know, it detects and it runs. And it's got the
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graphics running and I didn't have to do anything. And it even figured out Wi-Fi and got the Wi-Fi
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connected to my home Wi-Fi that I had. And I was just clever guested. I mean, this was this was
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easy as pie. I mean, this you didn't, you didn't have to do anything. It just ran to the point
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that at this time when I was having this problem in 2004. So it's sometime previous to that
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that I had started using Mopix. And at this particular time and there's some subsequent things
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there over the next few weeks when I used the blog, okay. Before podcast came along and started
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taking over my life, I used to blog back in the day. This was a timeframe when I was still blogging
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on a regular basis. And I had several entries there about the machinations of getting my T20
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rebuilt by the IT people at work. And then there was a new machine because I could say this was
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getting a little bit old. And so the new machine was going to be on order and I was seriously
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considering. And what I ended up actually doing was using Mopix as I referred to it as a virtual PC.
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I would log on with Mopix with the live CD. And this was back to the time frame where you couldn't
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really install it from the live CD, right? You could just run the live CD. But the live CD did
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everything I needed it to do. And what I would do then is I wouldn't store anything on the hard drive
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that was internal to laptop. What I would do instead was I had various USB drives. And I even had
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a PC card slot drive and I had a micro drive, which was this little compact flash card size drive,
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but it was a real spinning hard drive. And those came out initially in the megabyte range of
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340 megabyte when I know I had at one point. And I think I had upwards of a five gig. I think that
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was the biggest one I ever had. The micro drive. And then the micro drive was cool because it would fit
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into my Axiom, my Dell Axiom 50X. That was my last of my Windows, you know, my Windows Mobile
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based PDAs, if you will. I carried that around for quite a while. And it had a PC card slot,
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but it had a compact flash slot in that. And so I had five gigs of storage. And in fact,
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I would do a little bit of the supposed podcast of my podcast that never gets started. And I was
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recording live to my drive. And I was driving around with that in my pocket and recording. There was
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a guy who did a very interesting podcast back then on his drive time. And he worked at
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Silicon Graphics. He worked at Industrial Light Magic. That's it. And he was a very interesting
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podcast for a while. And he did his to an Axiom. Anyway, I was recording live to micro drive. That
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was going to be my signature phrase. So I had that five gig compact flash card. And I think
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it was readable by Nopics too. Anyway, I had various ways to store data. And so what I would do
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is go online. And I was, you know, doing all my web surfing and everything like that. And I
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actually started doing that for all my personal stuff. I just saved things out to a USB stick.
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And I would go ahead and do things there with the Nopics disk. And so that was my initial
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foray into using Linux. And it was very functional. In fact, I have a part of those posts that I
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have from back in 2004. That was back when my oldest daughter was still in school. And she brought
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home during her break from school. She brought home her laptop. And I was able to borrow her
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laptop. And the interesting thing about using Nopics with that was not to recover data or anything
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like that. But rather, it was a problem with her XP and the wireless drivers. At this particular
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time, we were still using, and I mentioned this on an earlier podcast, which I think got recorded
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properly and played in that 90s timeframe. I had a airport, which was actually initially being
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used with its crossover of the modem that was in the original airports. I think looked kind of
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like a miniature flying saucer. It was this round thing. It actually ended up with a PC card,
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wireless B card that was in it that provided the wireless portion of things. And this was late 90s.
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And then it would dial in to the AT&T dial-up account that we had because we didn't have a cable
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modem yet. So we were sharing the dial-up account and I had it set up to dial in. Well, we were
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still using that. Now, by 2004, we had the cable modem in. But I was still using that old wireless
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router and plugging it into the Ethernet and using that to provide the Ethernet, I mean, wireless
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to the house. And XP just didn't want to stay connected to that ancient old airport
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router. But it worked fine when I went over to my best friend's house and the router that they had.
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So something about XP's wireless drivers did not like the old airport and refused to maintain
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a connection to it. But when I slapped Nopix end there and booted up on it, it stayed connected fine.
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And so the live CD that Nopix was the first one and everybody's used to them now. But man,
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that was a revolution. Detecting the drivers that it needed, detecting the hardware,
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automatically figuring, I can't think of a machine that I slapped that into that I couldn't
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get it running. And I continued to do this kind of virtual laptop until eventually some of the
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other live CDs came out. And that next step was going to, and I discovered it, but that will be
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the next in my path to Linux. And there's some things that I learned and things that I started
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doing that are part of this continuation of virtualizing my laptop at work and not doing anything
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with the work machine except using the hardware platform to run my own operating system.
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But that will happen the next time, because I'm home now. So be careful out there not only
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driving the streets, if there's what is the ones I'm on now or out there on the electronic
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frontier. And as always, I'll be blazing the trail ahead of you. Until next time, this is Mr.
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Katzips, signing off from Kansas City. And we'll talk to you again soon. Bye now.
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Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio. For more information on the show and how to
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contribute your own shows, visit Hacker Public Radio dot org.
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