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154 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
154 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1333
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Title: HPR1333: Introduction / How I Got Into Linux
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1333/hpr1333.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:40:13
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---
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music
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Hello, Hacker Public Radio, this is Matthew, the stay-at-home geek dad from Northern California.
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This is my first contribution to HPR and I've been listening for a couple of months now
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and been very excited about the content.
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I have very much enjoyed a Hucka's series on Libre Office Writer, I'm looking forward
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to him getting on to spreadsheets and impress and all that good stuff, so I am just going
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to do a short introduction podcast and a little bit of how I got into Linux and then I would
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like to branch out maybe in my next episode and do a What's in My Bag.
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And then after that, I'm not sure.
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I'd like to go on with, but I'm very excited about being part of this community and being
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able to contribute content to all of you.
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So bear with me as I said, this is my first recording, my first attempt at this.
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Again, my name is Matthew and I go by the handle geek dad or stay-at-home geek dad.
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I live in, as I said, in Northern California, in the Central Valley and I am a stay-at-home
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dad.
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That's my job.
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I take care of my kids.
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I have a one-year-old son and a almost three-year-old daughter.
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And then I have an 11-year-old son who lives with his mom much of the year but comes out
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to visit us here in California in the summer and on holidays.
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So I have been involved with technology in one way or another as long as I can remember.
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It started for me with high-fi equipment and stereo equipment.
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My dad had a pretty decent stereo when I was a kid and I enjoy music a lot.
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So I was interested in the machines that made the music come out of the speakers and when
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I was in the sixth grade, I got my first component system and it had a dual cassette deck and
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it had a CD player and an FM tuner and I just really enjoyed that.
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And later on in my young teen years, I spent some time doing sound booths, sitting at
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the sound board and working the sound booth for church and so I got involved with those
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types of things and making recordings and using mics and leveling and all that stuff.
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And so that sort of interest in how things worked and the machines and the electronics
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that go into producing something just sort of stayed with me and when I graduated from
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high school in 1993 and I'm aging myself there.
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When I graduated from high school in 1993, I needed a computer for going off to college.
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My first computer was an Apple Macintosh Classic II which the classic line, I don't know
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if you all know or remember, was the all-in-one, the typical Mac, like the very first one,
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the beige sort of stretched out cube with the grayscale monitor on the front and a floppy
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drive slot on the front and then I had a keyboard and a mouse and it was running system
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7.5 and it was awesome.
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I loved that little machine and I took it to college and discovered the internet.
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We had dial-up access to a, let's see, was it a AIX machine, anyway, that was our dial-up
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access and we had shell access and then the campus was running a 56k frame relay connection
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to the internet and boy, we thought that was just fast back in those days, kind of sound
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like an old timer, anyway, I enjoyed getting on BBSs and telnet, telnetting into Bolton
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Boards and sending email and I ended up getting a job with the campus telephone telecommunications
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department and I learned about phones and fixing phones and running phone lines and
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troubleshooting phone circuits.
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We had our own physical plant on campus and our own switch.
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We generated our own dial tone.
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We had an NEC, big NEC switch in the basement of one of the buildings and we had cat
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300 pair and 200 pair cables from each building to spread our phone system around and this
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included all of the administration buildings, the offices, professors offices and all the
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student dorms had a telephone line.
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So I started working for telecommunications and learned how to pull cable and terminate
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punch down.
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My sophomore year, the college decided it was going to run an Ethernet network, the internet
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had grown and it was becoming apparent that we were going to need higher speed communication
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bandwidth on campus.
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We ended up pulling fiber between the buildings and I learned how to terminate fiber and we
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had cat 5, we had cat 5 drops to every dorm room, we had multiple drops to every classroom,
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multiple drops to every faculty office and we had a good size, I would say probably 1600
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node Ethernet network and that's where I cut my teeth with networking.
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And our servers, the information technology people over in the library ran UNIX servers
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and probably Linux, I don't even know at that time, this was in the mid 90s what they
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were running but I know that my friend John who was the head of the information technology
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department always had multiple terminals up and running and whenever I logged in to
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my shell session he was always had at least one or two sessions logged in.
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But as far as that, that was the only exposure I had.
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The AS400 mainframe was still in the administration office and so many of our admin people needed
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to run a terminal emulator so that they could log into that AS400.
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So I started learning about networking and TCPIP and doing a bit of routing and not a
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whole lot, I wasn't really getting into that part of it, mostly physical plant.
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But I was still using Macintosh, I had swapped my friend of mine, actually became a girlfriend
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and then I'm now married to her, had a pretty nice Macintosh and it had a color screen and
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it was a little bit faster than mine and she didn't care much about computers at the time
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plus she really liked me.
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So she traded me in computers for the semester and I ended up using that machine and she
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used my classic two to write her papers and things.
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But I got into Mac networking and we actually ran two separate networks back in those days
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because Apple wanted to run its own protocol over the network.
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It wasn't using TCPIP there in pre OSX days, OSX 10 days.
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So yeah, we had Apple Talk network and we had TCPIP network for the PCs and just went
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along and went along and that was what I knew about.
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So after leaving college I got a job with an educational technology company in the Phoenix
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Arizona area and we ran labs at some charter schools and did text port and we did some consulting
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type work.
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So I got to do all of that and I learned a lot about Windows 3.1 and Windows 95 networking
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because this was the end of the 90s and that's what we were doing in the schools because
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it was tested and Windows 98 came out while I was at that job and so we learned how to transition
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over.
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But I learned about writing batch files and you know, when I and I files and all that
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and stuff or getting drivers loaded and things that boot for Windows so I was learning more
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about how computers worked and it up purchasing a new computer for our home which was a Windows
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98 machine and then when that machine died I ended up with a Mac, an EMac actually running
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OSX 10 and it was in those days in the early 2000s that I went to the library.
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And I found a book on something called FreeBSD and it had a disk in the back of it and
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this was FreeBSD4 I want to say maybe 5 and I took it home and I loaded it up on a
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spare machine and I just thought it was cool that it was something that not everybody else
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had.
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Like everybody ran Windows and I knew a lot of people that used Macs but I didn't know
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anybody that was using anything besides those two.
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So I got this FreeBSD box going and it ran KDE3 was the desktop environment and I just
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browse the net and send email and didn't really do anything spectacular with it.
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I just used it like I would use any other computer.
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So you know that's how I got associated with the concept of FreeSoftware.
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I had of course as I was reading online about FreeBSD I started reading about this thing
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called Linux but it seemed more flash in the panty at the time and at the same time
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more mainstream so that's kind of weird but I had just decided that I was going to be
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a FreeBSD guy and I was going to do everything with FreeBSD and those Linux guys could
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just you know go be popular and I was going to be just hardcore which as I look back
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now I realize how kind of silly that is sitting where I am today but anyway I worked with
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FreeBSD for a long time and I used to I ran our first home server that served up RIPT
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DVDs to play over our network was a FreeBSD server and it was a 4 I might have been a 486
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or a Pentium 1 anyway those were the days right and all it did was serve up these RIPT
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these file folders that had RIPT DVDs and they weren't compressed and they weren't you
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know converted into any other format they were just straight RIPT on my Mac using Mac the
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Ripper and then I would drop the RIPT folder onto the server and then connect to the server
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from the Mac or from the Mac laptop and watch movies watch videos that way so gosh I'm not
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even sure I'd have to think I probably should have thought before I started this recording
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and when I first actually installed a Linux distribution but I believe it was in 2008 I think
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it was Ubuntu and it was 9.04 I believe and I had gotten a new laptop from my wife for Christmas
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I was getting ready to go back to school and I installed Ubuntu on this laptop and I used it
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for all of my school stuff and it was great but I kept it as a dual boot with Windows Vista
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because I couldn't get the audio to work I couldn't get audio to work in Ubuntu and so if I wanted
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to watch a movie or listen to music or record something I had to do that in Windows and then I updated
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to Ubuntu 10.10 and power management broke and it wouldn't even boot and I got really frustrated
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and I reformatted and reinstalled Windows Vista and I said I'm just going to use Windows Vista
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and maybe someday this Linux thing will get its act together
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so fast forward to today and I have another laptop at Lenovo that I use every day
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and I'm actually running Ubuntu Studio with XFCE 12.04 I have learned to stick with LTS releases
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I have a 12.04.2 server in my house that runs my network my wife's laptop also runs as Ubuntu
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I believe hers is actually running a raring and then I have a little netbook that I'm getting
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ready to put elementary Luna on so I'm excited about that so that's sort of the short dish version
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of how I came to Linux and how I learned to appreciate computers and I recently posted on Facebook
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that I love computers more than anything else because they are the only things in my life that do
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what I ask them to do when I ask them to do it so that's that's what I'll leave you guys with
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as I am signing off on this first episode of hacker public radio thanks and as uh
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hookah would say support free software thanks
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you have been listening to hacker public radio at hacker public radio does our
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we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday
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today's show like all our shows was contributed by a hbr listener like yourself
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if you ever considered recording a podcast then visit our website to find out how easy it
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