• teft@lemmy.world
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    1 年前

    Slackware was my first as well. You really learned Linux using it. I probably rebuilt that drive a dozen times because I’d bork something and it was easier to reinstall than it was to figure out how I broke it in some new novel way.

    Also not having a phone to look stuff up and having to rely on looking stuff up in books was hell now that I think of it.

    • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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      1 年前

      Having the phone these days for reference is huge. When I did my current arch install a few years back, I realized how clutch it was having that option because it definitely wasn’t a thing even back in the mid aughts. Sifting through even the console manual was tedious as opposed to just searching for a solution, it makes one grateful for the current state of things.

      • aard@kyu.de
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        1 年前

        That was a reason back then to pay for a distribution box - it came with a very good printed manual. Which had beginner friendly sections like “now that you have a running system let’s configure and build a kernel matching your hardware”.

    • Supervisor194@lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      Same, Slackware, went over to Red Hate for a while then Debian - am using Ubuntu now. I’ll never forget (in 1998) setting up Slackware as a server on an old spare 486 the company I worked for had laying around. It had a SCSI hard drive. Oh the pain. USENET was the only good reference, and you’d sometimes have to post and wait a day for a response if you just couldn’t figure it out.

      Got that server running and saved the company hundreds of dollars a month - they had been paying egregious fees to host brochureware. They thought I was Superman.

    • Serinus@lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      it was easier to reinstall than it was to figure out how I broke it in some new novel way.

      I came to the same conclusion. But I couldn’t get it to reinstall. It kept wanting to use the old partition. (2001, maybe Ubuntu?)

      So I knew how to solve that. If the linux installation is wiped, then it’ll surely allow me to reinstall fresh. So,

      rm -rf /
      

      Begins deleting files…

      “Wait, my Windows partition is under that, isn’t it.” Ctrl+C frantically, it won’t stop. Pull the plug.

      I did get my files back. Just, you know, without file paths or file names. Do you know how many DLLs and worthless text files there are, by the way?

    • treadful@lemmy.zip
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      1 年前

      Also not having a phone to look stuff up and having to rely on looking stuff up in books was hell now that I think of it.

      Oh man, not having a second device to look things up and fucking up your NIC modem drivers. Impossible situation for a noob, but somehow I kept going.

  • Thorry84@feddit.nl
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    1 年前

    I started with SuSE 5 and it came with a book. I think it started with something like: “Don’t panic! You can do this!”

    It was rough at first, but once I got into it I was hooked.

        • mycelium underground@lemmy.world
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          1 年前

          A quick search says yes. That said, I haven’t read the book and don’t use mint. I feel like mint doesn’t need is own book, there are plenty of books on linux as a whole that are probably better.

          If you want the book pictured: Isbn-10 194985714x

    • naeap@sopuli.xyz
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      1 年前

      YaST and the fucking AVM Fritz ISDN ISA Card…

      A part of me is still crying when opening YaST killed my hand written configuration…

      • Thorry84@feddit.nl
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        1 年前

        Nah I went over to camp Debian for a long time, switched when Debian Potato was released. Then when Debian kinda stalled I was lured into Ubuntu because they had the latest and greatest. I know it isn’t the cool choice these days, but I have stuck with Ubuntu ever since.

        • Sips'@slrpnk.netOP
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          1 年前

          Recently tired Ubuntu on my work laptop and it was a surprisingly pleasant experience compared to all the negative things I’ve heard about Ubuntu. Especially the installer was next level simple.

          • Thorry84@feddit.nl
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            1 年前

            Yeah I love Ubuntu, it’s really fine. But I think because it’s easy and for a lot of people their first Linux, it’s seen as like the baby version of Linux. So people bitch about it a lot, as if it’s somehow inferior to other distros. Like if you don’t compile everything from scratch you are somehow not worthy?

            Hard “Real programmer” vibes. https://xkcd.com/378/

            And yes, I use pico as a text editor, it’s fine really.

          • Thorry84@feddit.nl
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            1 年前

            Wow! That’s really cool, Debian Potato was so hype back then. And every new release was amazing, I had Sarge running for so long. And I had a little home made router with Debian Sarge and an uptime of like 3 years. I had to replace the NIC on it, from a 10mbit coax only to a coax and UTP model because I was switching over to UTP. I didn’t want to shutdown the server, so I live swapped the ISA cards, and it actually worked!

            Those were the days.

    • Optional@lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      thank you. I stopped immediately right there and my brain went into fast forward to think of why some madperson had spelled DOS as DoS.

      AI? . . . It means something else?? . . . no, it’s gotta be AI. Or is it on purpose? just to fuck with us? . . . Why?!! Arrgh

  • TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org
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    1 年前

    Redhat, back in 1999. Then Mandrake 2002. Then Suse 2003. Then Ubuntu 2006. Then Debian 2012-present.

    But it’s funny I kept KDE since Mandrake. Same DE for over 20 years. For Redhat I was using this Win95 lookalike DE, I forgot what it was called.

    Edit: I definitely did not order a couple dozen of Ubuntu’s free CD-ROMs back in the day and throw them at everyone I knew and didn’t know, including random kiosk people at the mall…

  • eodur@lemmy.world
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    1 年前

    Slackware around 96. I downloaded it from a local BBS over a 28.8 modem. It took forever. I don’t recall how many floppies it took, but it was a good stack. I got it installed, then realized it was in Portuguese. I did not know Portuguese at the time. So I got a crash course in Linux and Portuguese at the same time learning how to reconfigure the language settings. It was a fun time.

  • UpperBroccoli@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 年前

    I downloaded slackware from a BBS. It took forever. It booted from two floppies, a boot and a root disk. It did not even have X. I still loved it, because I recently got into programming, and all I had ever programmed on was DOS. In Linux, you could actually malloc() with any amount, even a full megabyte! It was marvellous! Later, I installed it on my HD on a separate partition. The installation process was really fascinating, so much choice, so many new programs! At least the first time.

    • comador @lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      make menu; make menu config

      I did it so much: Slackware from Source that it seemed almost trivial once I got my first Plextor 3x and ordered the CD by mail lol.

      Edit: I shivered when I thought about it. I had a 486 SX with 1GB RAM, a 64k VLB Tulip Video card and a Connor 340MB HDD. It was slow as snot even then, but Linux was cool for being free.

      • Parade du Grotesque@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 年前

        Once you understand Slackware, you realize it is really simple and stable. It comes with an excellent selection of software in the base install, and does not contain any “surprises”. I have had uptime in the 200-300+ days range on my home server, updates and security patches are quick and painless, etc.

        In other words, it is a Linux optimized for usability and Unix compatibility, not necessarily user friendliness. It assumes you know what you are doing and gets out of your way.

        • daggermoon@lemmy.world
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          1 年前

          I may try it out someday. I don’t see myself daily driving it however. Never say never though. I used Void Linux for awhile and I liked it but I can’t daily drive a distro without systemD. Arch has been my go to for a while now. I’m glad Slackware still gets the love it deserves.

  • rtxn@lemmy.worldM
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    1 年前

    I also lost partitions (ESP and C:) during my move to a Linux-only setup, except it was because of Windows Update. On ya, Microsoft!

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    1 年前

    I will never forget when I accidentaly wiped my external hard drive messing around snd distro hopping, I lost 6000 songs that day…

  • m4m4m4m4@lemmy.world
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    1 年前

    I recall telling this story here on Lemmy not long ago - (and got downvoted some weeks ago for saying that it can happen on any distro… kids don’t know the real struggle I guess) - back in the day I swiped my HDD trying to install ubuntu 5.10 and lost all my data from uni and stuff. Still I can’t remember how I managed to install it after some attempts like a year after that or so.

    I’d be upset about losing my data but truth is that somehow I was used to it - third world problems made it frequently due to not having a cd burner to burn my data and crappy IDE HDDs that got corrupted after a while just because. I still have some of them stored somewhere in hopes I could try to recover something from them someday, like some sort of cryogenic stuff.

  • YurkshireLad@lemmy.ca
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    1 年前

    Yggdrasil for me, i think. I honestly don’t remember how it went though.

    I had Linux on a second SSD at home recently, but an update to the laptop’s BIOS seems to have stopped it from letting me boot from it. I only keep windows around for games, which is ironic, as I hardly play them anymore.

    Work is a windows shop, but I’d rather use Linux.

    • Exec@pawb.social
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      1 年前

      I only keep windows around for games

      Most games (well, those without invasive anti-cheats) run on Linux as well

    • gramie@lemmy.ca
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      1 年前

      I also started with Yggdrasil. A CD-ROM in the back of a massive book (printouts of all the man pages, I think).

  • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    1 年前

    Redhat. Back in the early 90’s.

    Fuck RHEL, though. And let’s be honest, why pick just one flavor? (Currently using arch.)

  • 7rokhym@lemmy.ca
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    1 年前

    The year is about right. I didn’t lose my DOS partition, but I was already familiar with partitioning. Someone gave me a Slackware CD set. Had a lot of difficulty getting a higher res than 640x480 with my VLB video card.
    Started a BBS at the time, switched to OS/2 Warp, which worked awesome until Windows apps moved to the new Win95 requirements. Started using RHEL for a while, but eventually Debian, then Ubuntu, and now PopOS.

    It’s been a long journey, but now Windows 11 is the weird OS that needs hours of troubleshooting and tweaking and adjustments. It’s just not worth the effort, so I keep an Windows 10 VM around with Office for the odd occasion when I need it.