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223 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 350
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Title: HPR0350: How I found Linux 002
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0350/hpr0350.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 17:02:48
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---
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Thank you very much.
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Hey everyone, welcome to Hacker Public Radio, I'm Monster B, and this is the second episode
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of How I Found Lennox, and I'm very excited to say there will be an episode three.
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And if you would like to be part of this, find out at the end of the show, okay, enjoy.
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Hi, I'm Gordon Sinclair, I am Thistle Rib, and the IRC.
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How I Found Lennox, basically started off with ideas for lots of different stories.
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So I got a word processor, which is basically an electronic typewriter, to see if I could
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do it.
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I got one second and I got it cheap, and it turned out that I could go through one short
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story, and it turned out to be much better than I thought, so I thought, hey, you know
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what, I could do this for 11, I've obviously got something I could build on, and learn,
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and get better.
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So I figured it would be an investment to buy a PC, at this point I had used my mum and
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dad's Windows 98 machine, but I was very limited to what I could do with it.
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They'd never had it connected in there now, and I never knew anything outside Windows.
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So I got a PC, I've spent a lot of money on a PC, and it's the same one I have just
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now.
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It's a Pentium 4, came with XP Home on it, and I figured, since I've spent a fortune
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on this thing, a fortune certainly could put them into my income, I'm going to make damn
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sure I'm going to learn how to keep this thing running, what to do, what not to do, regular
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maintenance, learn how to fix it, rather than keep spending lots of money and repairs.
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That was my motivation for starting learning how to use a PC properly, rather than just
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being satisfied as a regular user, basically.
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So from that, it turned out that the various things I was looking into in the skill set,
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as I was teaching myself, I found out, I can actually, I'm picking this up a lot better
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than I thought, but I wasn't struggling anywhere near as much as I expected to.
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So I figured, maybe I could do this for a career.
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So that led me into looking at certifications, and that led me to the A-plus and MCB.
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I didn't know there were indoctrination programs at the time, because I had all our new
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as Windows, but I went on both of them, and between, there was a Cisco course on at the
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same time, we got the same t-brakes and launch brakes at the same time as us, so we would
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quite often meet them outside of a smoke and whatever.
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And a couple of them, New Bitlinux, they had, one of the guys, had Mandrake 9.1, they gave
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me a copy of the three series, and between them and the instruct, one of the students
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on my MCB who was also a teacher, who was resetting his exam, they have to do that every so often,
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to be allowed to teach the courses.
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He had, when I was sitting in that class, I could see his screen, and I could see what
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looked like Windows, but it wasn't Windows, it looked like Windows with some sort of a
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cool skin on it, and it turned out to be nobics with KDE, but I only found that out once
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I started asking about it, anyway, between those two, and the occasional reference to Linux
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and the course books, and one picture I read at desktop type of thing, what do you expect,
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it's comp TIA and Microsoft that do the course, what do you expect, really.
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Between them, I started exploring Linux, but then I found out that my newfound knowledge
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about partitions and file systems and all of this, the bravery to do a bit for the first
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time, and that was where I ran into problems of my, I was on dialogue, my modem was a
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one modem, I'd never even heard of the concept before that, but I struggled to get online,
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without I couldn't get online, with any of the Linux distributions I tried, and I tried
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quite a few, because I liked what I saw, I just meant that any time I had to go online,
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I had to come back into Windows again, which was really annoying, but anyway, when I switched
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up to broadband, I thought, well, that's going to be different now, so, because I got
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a SpeedTox modem with my broadband provider, and I started renewed vigor going through
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lots of Linux distributions, and most of them required some firmware upgrades to work.
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Eventually I found my Ndriva1 that found it okay, and I managed to get online, but that
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was buggy itself, I moved from there to PC on XLS, and I was on that for quite a while,
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so that's an awesome distribution, but I was very KDE-centric, when I was digital hopping,
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I was trying different distributions, I'd look for KDE versions, and I wouldn't really,
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as much as I would try stuff with Nome or XFC or Fluxbox or whatever, my mindset was
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going in very closed, I was looking for things to not to like, anyway, I eventually got
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kind of bored of KDE, moved to Ubuntu for a little while, I tried to Ubuntu again, and
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found that hey, I actually quite like GTK, I like Nome, and then I found, I was on that
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for a little while, Ubuntu, and then found it was really, I mean, KDE and Nome are really
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too heavy for my computer, I need this borderline, they work, but they're just too heavy,
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really to be all that practical. So, then after I sort of liked or grew into GTK, I could
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then give XFC another go, and it was like coming home, it was like suddenly I felt like I've
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got something I really like using, so since then I've basically been an XFC user and looking
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for different distributions that I've got good, strong, well implemented XFC variants,
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and tried a few, and I've came to Linux Mint as my current favourite XFCE distribution,
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Woolfix is incredible as well, there's the only thing that I could see that would possibly draw
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me away from that, is the Linux Mint KDE, is that I really like the look of KDE for, or KDE
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4.2, and the Mint's implementation of it looks really sweet, it's just my hard work, it doesn't
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really stand much of a chance at running KDE 4.2, that's why I've not even tried it yet.
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So, there's that, I did flop for a little while with Crunchbank, and I really liked that, but I found
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myself drawing back to Mint XFCE, so that's how I got to where I'm just now, and how I came to
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Linux, so thanks for listening, goodbye. Hey, this is Terry F, and this is how I found Linux,
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must have, is the late 90s, probably around 2,099, 98s somewhere around there, I'd had a
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screwed up Windows 95 install, and I'd asked a friend of mine, Monster B, to give me a hand,
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because I knew zero about computers, so he installed Windows 98 on it, and had mentioned Linux at
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the time, so I had downloaded a version of Red Hat, I forget which version it was, I'd dial up,
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so it probably took a couple days, so I installed Red Hat on an old Packard Bell, well, it wouldn't
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really old then, but I guess it is now, a Packard Bell 46 DX, it was a huge pain in the ass to install,
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reading all kinds of guides, partitioning the hard drive, it was just a thrill to get the sound
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to work at that point, but I got it installed, and did absolutely nothing with it,
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so I dropped that, went back to Windows, till about, I don't know, three years ago, somewhere around,
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three and a half years ago, started with Ubuntu, and about, I don't even know, about a year and a half,
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two years ago, I've been on Linux exclusively, on my desktop, my laptop,
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and I've got a second desktop downstairs, that I screw around with Slackware and
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Arge a little bit, Debian, but my dad also has an old laptop that I've put,
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Linux on for him, that he uses daily, I just built a desktop, a home theater PC type
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case, but she uses it on her, built this for her mother, she uses it on her 40, 47th TV, 42-inch TV,
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because she used to have a MSN2 TV box, that died, and I decided to build her a computer for
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TV instead, and he's a Bluetooth keyboard with an integrated mousepad, works great out of the box,
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and Linux, she loves it, I built that last week, and loves it much more than MSN TV,
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but that's pretty much my story.
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Hello, Linux Cranks, my name is David, I live in New York City,
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in your last show, Clare 2 had an idea for how we got ourselves introduced to Linux,
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I wanted to add that, I got into Linux from using a Unix account back in 1993,
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and my first Linux crystal was E desktop 2.4 from Cadera,
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and right now I am currently using Arch Linux, I've been using Linux since 1995,
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and like they say the rest of the history, you guys have a great show, and I would love to see more
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windows bashing, it makes me show more interesting, sorry for any pops, I don't have a pop filter,
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I don't, all I'm using is a microphone, anyway, that's my input, and I hope you use it, and have a great day.
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Hi, this is Weeks from the Trigon to Linux Free Software podcast, I found Linux in 2002,
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after a friend suggested it that I play around with it, I went and bought myself a book,
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and read a good deal of it, then tried to install it on a system,
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and I really had no idea what to do with it once I had it installed,
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but nowadays I use it for a web server, for a database server, for home server and desktop,
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and laptop, so really this guy is a limit, and in addition it's introduced me a whole,
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into the whole world of free software.
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How I got into Linux, hello my name is Ken Simeon, aka script monkey,
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when I was in my first software quality assurance job, I was first introduced to Linux back in 1998,
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my software developer that wanted to make sure our in hotel internet connection service would
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also work with Linux operating system, and not just Windows and Mac. He handed me a software box,
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but I don't remember if it was Caldera Linux or Corel Linux, I loaded up the distro without a
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problem on the pinning one laptop, and I tested the OS with the Netscape web browser to make sure
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it all worked, and it did, about a year later in 1999 or 2000, I was working for a different company
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that produced network appliances loaded with BSDI, I wanted a way to better interact with our products,
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and I was told to try Linux, at that time I loaded Red Hat, Linux 5.5, or maybe 6.0, I don't remember
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which, I instantly fell in love with the ability to tweak, customize, and try new software packages,
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without cost. I also love that I didn't have to run Windows to get my work done.
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From that point on, I moved from not only running Linux at work, but also running Linux at home,
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I stuck with the Red Hat until about release 8, or whenever they stopped producing a
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free desktop product, and switched to Gen2 as my distro of choice. I ran Gen2 until about 2007,
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then I tried Fedora 7.8, and eventually switched to Arch Linux based on the recommendation of
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Chess Griffin of Linux Reality. That is how I got into Linux.
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Hello, this is Russ Wender, the host of the TechieGeek podcast. How did I find Linux?
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Well, we have to go back, back in time, back, back to 1983, when my dad brought home an Apple 2E.
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That was my first experience on a computer that I got to touch and to play with,
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and I remember my dad subscribed to some magazine where I could type in programs and get them to work,
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and it was very cool. And I played with computing up through college, I was exposed to
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Fortran in college, even some old punch card readers that were around, and then 1990, I took
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a course in college on using the PC in the business, and that was a IBM PC, and I think around that time
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was when the geekness started to kick in, even more so than back in 83. I took seven years to
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germinate, but in 1990, that's when it started to kick in. And where I worked at the time,
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we had some PCs out on the shop floor that ran THOS and used a program called DNC, which communicated
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with the automated equipment, and I learned everything I could about how those DNCs operated.
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And in 1993, I got promoted into the engineering office as a CAD designer, and the CAD software
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that they used was EDS Unographics, which ran on HPUX, which is a UNIX platform. And what I found
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was most everybody, the engineers and everyone, just wasn't that interested in learning how to
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do much on the UNIX platform. They just wanted to use the CAD software, and they avoided doing
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upgrades and backups, and the things that they really should be doing. So I took an interest in
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how to do those things, and I learned how to grab and change directories and fine files
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within the operating system itself. I often wonder if I had become a UNIX admin back then in 1993,
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where my career could have gone. But instead I stayed on the engineering track to things.
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Also in December of 1993, December 3rd to be exact, it was a Friday after work. I picked up my
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first PC that was my own. It ran Windows 3.11, and also had DOS 6.22 loaded on it. And I thought
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this was it, man. I just learned everything I could about that computer, and I had it, but a few
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days, and I began to wonder what exactly you could do with this thing called a modem, and it had a
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2400 modem, and I learned about a program called ProCom that I could use to connect to something
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called a bulletin board system. And I got hugely into the bulletin board scene, and one of the
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sister admins that ran the bulletin board that I was really into said that he was going to begin
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an ISP, and asked if I wanted to be one of the first members of the ISP. Yeah, heck yeah, I want to
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be one of the first members, and it ran on Sun Solaris, too, I believe it was. And I got something
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called a Unix shell account, and it looked very similar to what I knew from HPUX. So I started
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poking around quite a bit in the Solaris shell, and at the same time, the interwebs was starting
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to get underway, and I learned how to use this directory called Public HTML, and I started to
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experiment with some web design, and by 1996, I was very into the whole internet scene. In 1997,
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I switched companies and went to a company that had virtually no IT infrastructure at all,
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and the VP of engineering at that time was given the task of getting a PC on everyone's desk,
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getting internet, and getting email for everyone. Well, being the good delicator that he was,
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he gave that duty to me, and that was like the coolest thing. I mean, I had to do everything,
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shop for an ISP, routers, firewalls. I ran every foot of CAT 5 cable in that company,
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everything. And the firewall was a white box PC, essentially, that ran open BSD. And open BSD
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seemed a little bit intimidating at the time, but I was quickly convinced that it was the best
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most secure firewall out there. And to this day, I believe many firewalls still rely on that
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open BSD technology, and specifically the IP filtering program within open BSD.
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And in there, I learned a little bit about send mail. I rekindled some of my interest with
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TAR and VI, and I really started to rekindle that interest in the unique style operating systems.
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And then one day, while surfing the internet, I came across an interesting link
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that mentioned a new type of Linux distro that ran from a live CD. And I was like,
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what the heck is a live CD? So I went and checked it out and said you could run a Linux distro
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completely off the CD without installing it. And the name of the distro was NOPEX 3.1.
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And I said, yeah, I got to get me some of that. So I downloaded the ISO for that, and that was
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probably the beginning of the end for me. Because when I saw how cool Linux live CD was,
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and how I was able to mount corrupted Windows drives that would no longer boot. And people were
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panicking that they lost their pictures, and their data, and their email, and their favorites,
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and their whatever. Here I was able to drop in an OPPIC CD, boot up, and save all their data.
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And every time a distro came out with a live CD, I downloaded it. Every time NOPEX came out with
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a new version, I downloaded it. And to this day, I still download live CDs and try them all the time,
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although more so these days, I download the ISO and install them into virtual box.
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So in 2002, my employer kind of got on a kick where they were going to send people for
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continuing training, and anything that they wanted to go for, as long as it was somehow
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work-related. So at that time, I was very adept in Windows environment, but I really wanted to
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increase my knowledge in the Unix-like operating systems. So I signed up for the fundamentals of
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Unix administration, and then right after that, I took Advanced Linux administration. And by
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today's standards, even the Advanced administration would seem not so advanced, but was very
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interesting to me, and very surprising. I entered the classroom totally expecting to see HPUX,
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or some other Unix operating system on the classroom PCs, and we booted up, and it said Slackware
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8.0. And I was like, wow, this is Linux, isn't it? And the instructor went on to say that
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Slackware is the most Unix-like of the Linux distros, and that was in 2002, I believe. And I was
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like, cool, I could totally dig it. And I went for five days, I think, two days on the fundamental
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of Unix, and then three days on the Advanced. And all five days were in the command line,
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and it was very cool. And it was right around that time that Slackware 8.1 came out. So the
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instructor actually downloaded the ISO and said that if anyone was interested, after the last day,
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he would show anybody who was interested how to install Slackware. And I was like, yeah, I'm very
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interested. I think I was the only one who stayed after, and we went through the whole installation
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of Slackware 8.1, which was a tremendous help, because when it hit that partitioning stuff,
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I would have had no idea what to do if he wasn't there to walk me through it. So just as soon as
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I could, when I got home with that Slackware 8.1 CD, it just went to the next level. And I ran
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Slackware 8.1 for a long time, and then I installed Debian. And I ran Debian 3.0 for a long time.
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Then I got the itch to switch distros again, and I went to Fedora 6. And I ran Fedora 6 for a while,
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and then I ran who bought to Guetzigibin was the next GUI desktop that I ran. And then from there,
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I've been pretty much Ubuntu on my computers at home. Now I have installed on the server side,
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I have installed Debian Ubuntu and Senos on server. So right now, I have a Senos server that I
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just upgraded to 5.3. At work, I have two Ubuntu machines, a Ubuntu hardy-haaring desktop,
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and an Ubuntu hardy-haaring server. I just feel more comfortable staying on the long-term
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support software for the stuff I use at work, no hurry to upgrade there. And at home,
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I have the Senos 5.3 server, and then I have three Ubuntu i-backs machines, two desktops,
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one I would consider my test machine. The other one was my main desktop until I got my system 76
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Pangolin laptop, which runs 64-bit Ubuntu i-backs. So that's where I am today. I'm loving Linux,
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99% Linux at home. Unfortunately, as a Windows sis admin, I don't get to use Linux very much
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at work, but I'm finding places to use it more and more. So that's my story, and I'm sticking
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to it. See you. All right, that was sweet. All right, come on, send your audio clips in.
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We want to hear from you, and you can send them to Monster B and Linux CrankstownInfo
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and check the show notes for more information. Well, this has been fun. Thanks for listening
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to Hacker Public Radio, and I'll talk to you next time.
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