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  <title>Tumbleweed Rants</title>
  <subtitle>Stefano's World</subtitle>
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  <updated>2007-12-29T01:00:12+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>The Journey to being a Linux Geek</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://tumbleweed.org.za/me/linux-history" />
    <id>http://tumbleweed.org.za/me/linux-history</id>
    <published>2007-12-29T01:00:12+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-12-29T01:00:12+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>tumbleweed</name>
    </author>
    <category term="debian" />
    <category term="history" />
    <category term="linux" />
    <category term="personal" />
    <category term="Static Page" />
    <category term="ubuntu" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Even before school, my future interests were clear: I tied-up the house with wires and made &#8220;electrical gadgets&#8221; out of old electrical junk. I remember being given <em>my</em> first battery, light bulbs, and wires. From there it&nbsp;was&nbsp;downhill.</p>

<h2>The first&nbsp;<span class="caps"><span class="caps">PC</span></span>:</h2>

<p>My first computer was a [<span class="caps"><span class="caps">HP</span></span> 9816][]. It was a year older than me, had a 6800 Processor, 128k <span class="caps"><span class="caps">RAM</span></span>, and an (external) pair of single sided 3.5&#8221;&nbsp;floppy&nbsp;drives.</p>

<p>It had a <span class="caps"><span class="caps">ROM</span></span> <span class="caps"><span class="caps">BASIC</span></span> board, and a set of [VisiCalc][] floppies (with manual shutters), so I spent&nbsp;my&nbsp;time</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Even before school, my future interests were clear: I tied-up the house with wires and made &#8220;electrical gadgets&#8221; out of old electrical junk. I remember being given <em>my</em> first battery, light bulbs, and wires. From there it was&nbsp;downhill.</p>

<h2>The first&nbsp;<span class="caps">PC</span>:</h2>

<p>My first computer was a <a href="http://www.hpmuseum.net/display_item.php?hw=4"><span class="caps">HP</span> 9816</a>. It was a year older than me, had a 6800 Processor, 128k <span class="caps">RAM</span>, and an (external) pair of single sided 3.5&#8221; floppy&nbsp;drives.</p>

<p>It had a <span class="caps">ROM</span> <span class="caps">BASIC</span> board, and a set of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VisiCalc">VisiCalc</a> floppies (with manual shutters), so I spent my time
reading it&#8217;s comprehensive manuals, making mazes in Visicalc (out of #s), writing games in <span class="caps">BASIC</span>, and
otherwise abusing the poor machine. It had really fun, easy graphics, which drew slowly
enough that you could learn a lot. On the whole, a nice machine —
I wish I knew what has happened to it and it&#8217;s pile of&nbsp;manuals&#8230;</p>

<p>From there, I migrated to a 386 with hercules graphics and <span class="caps">DOS</span> (that I shared with a friend). And eventually,
Windows. I toyed with programming in <span class="caps">BASIC</span>, Visual Basic and Pascal. But mostly used my computers for gaming (and messing around with things). Most of the software I wrote around this time was in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psion_OPL">Psion <span class="caps">OPL</span></a>, on my inherited Series&nbsp;3a.</p>

<h2>Disillusion with <span class="caps">MS</span> Windows sets&nbsp;in</h2>

<p>I was getting just a little peeved with my <span class="caps">MS</span> Windows desktop. When one has
a 500MiB <span class="caps">HDD</span>, fitting Windows 98, Office, and Visual Studio on it and still
having a productive machine is difficult. It was obvious that there were big
problems with Windows (and Microsoft software in general). I became very
Anti-Microsoft, although I knew of no alternatives and hypocritically stuck
with the Microsoft way of&nbsp;life.</p>

<p>At the local computer trade show, my friends and I would paste &#8220;Microsoft
Sucks!&#8221; stickers (provided by a nearby labelling store&#8217;s demonstration
printers ;-) all over the Microsoft stand. We&#8217;d also torment the Microsoft
demonstrators and shout support when they asked &#8220;Who uses Lotus
1-2-3?&#8221; — basically, we where their worst&nbsp;nightmare&#8230;</p>

<h2>Enter&nbsp;<span class="caps">GNU</span>/Linux</h2>

<p>Quite soon after my family capitulated to Internet access, I heard about Linux, and started to read about it online. I avidly read anything I could get my hands on, and tried a few shell accounts (<span class="caps">BSD</span> presumably), but never got anywhere near installing it&nbsp;myself.</p>

<p>One day, a computer technician was working on the school office PCs (which I
considered to be my domain) and we chatted. He asked me if I used
Linux, and offered to get me a <span class="caps">CD</span>. I&#8217;ve still got it — RedHat&nbsp;5.1.</p>

<p>I installed it, played around with it for a while, and then abandoned it. For
the next couple years after, I would try it again every now and again,
especially when I could get my hands on a newer version, but never too
seriously, because I didn&#8217;t have a decent internet connection, know how to program C,
or have any real Linux-using friends. And of course, playing <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XBill">XBill</a> only keeps
you entertained for so&nbsp;long&#8230;</p>

<p>Later, I got involved in building my school&#8217;s Computer Room (from a pile of
spare parts and dead PCs, plus the insurance payout for 2 stolen [dead] PCs).
I knew that this would be a good place to use Linux, because I could share the
dial-up internet connection more reliably, and run a local mail server. It would make much
better use of our very limited&nbsp;resources.</p>

<h2>Seriously,&nbsp;now</h2>

<p>So, in the holidays I took the fastest machine home, scavenged some more <span class="caps">RAM</span>,
and taught myself how to configure everything from&nbsp;scratch.</p>

<p>When I came across the sendmail.cf file, I got really frightened and
switched to qmail. The same happened when
I looked into <span class="caps">BIND</span>, and I used&nbsp;djbdns.</p>

<h2>Debian to the&nbsp;rescue</h2>

<p>After about 6 months of administering this machine (still <span class="caps">RH</span>), I hit my first
&#8220;dependency hell.&#8221; At about this point I was getting involved in
our <span class="caps">LUG</span>, and <a href="http://www.grok.org.za/" title="Thomas Andrews">Tom</a> gave me a copy of <a href="http://www.debian.org/">Debian</a> woody — I have never
looked&nbsp;back!</p>

<h2>The Linux quest really&nbsp;begins</h2>

<p>Of course the next step was to network my home — this taught me almost everything else that I needed to know to be a Linux admin&#8230; I still have the same server that I started with (well same Debian install, case, and motherboard - everything else has died along the&nbsp;way).</p>

<h2>Enter&nbsp;Ubuntu</h2>

<p>With the release of Ubuntu Breezy, I decided that it was worth a look at, and
installed it on my mother&#8217;s <span class="caps">LTSP</span> server and my&nbsp;laptop.</p>

<p>This wasn&#8217;t all bliss, Ubuntu is still a little rough on the edges (although
less so than Debian, and in different places). However, I was pretty happy
with it. That doesn&#8217;t mean that I run it on my main desktop, but I do on my laptops, and I install it on other people&#8217;s machines where&nbsp;possible.</p>

<h2>Epilogue</h2>

<p>Now I only use Linux (and only Debian +derivatives). I maintain several networks
under the guise of Hybrid, and co-maintain
our LUGs servers (mailing lists, ftp/rsync mirror, and a freedom&nbsp;toaster).</p>

<p>I try and attend Free Software conferences where I can. Usually <a href="http://lugradio.org/live/">LugRadio Live</a> if I&#8217;m in the <span class="caps">UK</span>, and last year, <a href="http://www.ubuntulive.com/">Ubuntu Live</a> and <a href="http://conferences.oreillynet.com/oscon/"><span class="caps">OSCON</span></a>.</p>

<p>I&#8217;m very happy with my software choices, and look forward to a Linuxy future&nbsp;:-)</p>
    ]]></content>
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