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in reply to It's FOSS

It's been a long time but I recall I wanted to expand my knowledge of computers as a teenager. Back then it was harder to do anything with Linux but my Dad had a free disc of SUSE Linux so I started there. Then when I came back to having a desktop, instead of a laptop, I decided to give Linux a try again (I was trying to avoid Windows at the time) and I instantly fell in love with how far it had come and I've never looked back
This entry was edited (6 days ago)
in reply to It's FOSS

the Raspi 1: #Boku we needed to store pH-meter readings. the USB to RS232 dongle with a win laptop did not work well, but there was a RS232 hat for a raspi.
#boku
in reply to It's FOSS

Windows 3.1.x ate a University paper I worked tirelessly on. There was no auto save at the time and at 3AM, I forgot to do so. When you have to rewrite 40% of a 70-page paper, it tends to be irksome.
in reply to It's FOSS

the customisability and the ability to easily see and control wbat happens behind the scenes.
in reply to It's FOSS

Had a Toshiba laptop in 1999 that was painfully slow running Windows NT 4.0 - Didn't want 98 SE...

A friend who used linux got me curious about it and then helped me install Red Hat Linux 6.0 on it. Worked much better, been using linux since then.

in reply to It's FOSS

heard about it from a guy at a local computer store as a teenager in the mid 90s. Got hold of a Mandrake Linux CD (remember that one?) from somewhere and started messing around.

Things progressed from there and I'm lucky to use Linux exclusively at home and work these days.

in reply to It's FOSS

back in early 90s it was new, weird, different. Checked all the boxes.
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I was working with multiple variants of Linux on the job. This was back in 2016-ish. A buddy of mine told me I should dual boot with a Linux OS at the time and said 'good luck'. Sometimes I want to smack that friend, but I'm glad I stuck with it. So thanks friend for making me beat my head against the Linux wall. You are appreciated. You know who you are. :blobcatcoffee:
in reply to It's FOSS

switching from Atari ST to DOS/Windows 3.11 pc felt painful. Switching the pc on physically gave me pain. But I could only use it in dual boot because of ms office back then. These days, windows is only required as a VM for one single program on my Linux laptop. At university we had 24 inch color monitors on hp-ux driven xterminals. It was such a wonderful environment to work in. Linux (LST and SuSe back then) felt as nice at home.
in reply to It's FOSS

I think it was, because I couldn‘t afford a Sun Sparcststion back in the 80s and just got a bunch of Linux floppy disks from a friend.
in reply to It's FOSS

Circa 2001 or so, spent a lot of time as a late-teens-aged person hanging out in IRC. Learned about UNIX/BSD and then learned there was a free and open OS out there and went on to explore running Mandrake Linux and Red Hat on Pentium machines then eventually running Gentoo circa 2005

25 years later, the *nix terminal is still my one true home.

in reply to It's FOSS

freedome, privacy, free, foss and can't stand window or ios but discovered a big big love for Linux 🐧❤✅
This entry was edited (6 days ago)
in reply to It's FOSS

Microsoft started trying to force Windows 10 on my computer. That alone was bad enough, but their sketchy tactics made it worse, and the knowledge that they were moving toward the surveillance model worse still.
in reply to It's FOSS

Curiosity. Because it's so legendary and exudes an aura of coolness. I wanted to know if I, as a normal person without great computer skills, could do it too. The many encouragements here, too, when the topics of network policy and data protection were given so much attention for various reasons.
in reply to It's FOSS

FREEDOM to choose and privacy, I don't have anything to hide, but I close the door when I go to the toilets 😁 it's also why I switch to #eOS on my phone !
#eos
in reply to It's FOSS

Windows 10 end of support on a laptop just barely old enough to be denied installing Windows 11 sparked my interest. Not that I would have installed Windows 11 because, well, I like to own my software, not rent it. So now I have dual boot Linux Mint for my laptop while I begin a phased transition off of Windows entirely.
in reply to It's FOSS

It was about two years ago now and the first rumors of Microslop screenshotting your computer were coming out. I was already getting irritated with data collection and everything and that just pushed my buttons.

Fast forward to today and I am so glad I moved away from literally a spyware OS. I also love the freedom of doing whatever I want with MY computer. Not being told what I can and cannot do.

in reply to It's FOSS

Probably didn't even know of it until I bought an eeepc with Xandros on it in 2008. While I didn't stick with it long term, it became a thing to put Linux on older computers and by 2021 all my PCs bar my main were running linux until last summer when I finally fully switched.
in reply to It's FOSS

the first push was in 1994, I had just bought my first PC, and was inquisitive, but I initially stuck to #Windows, the second in 2002, I was looking for a robust server stack for JEE, webprofile at my employer and chose suse linux enterprise, finally in 2022 I wanted to regain full control over my private machines again, better stability and maintainability and to protect myself from bigtech's data collection frenzy - #linux delivers in all aspects

#diday #unplugtrump #unplugbigtech

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in reply to It's FOSS

it was new, it was interesting, I read a book about it and had to try it.
So bought a pack with cd roms from walnut creek with slackware Linux on it.
Fun times.
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RaspberryPi in university, while not being able to afford apple devices as a student
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I’ve bought a Suse Linux Package in my local book shop. Including big paper manuals 🥰
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Around 1996, Watchtower m68k on Amiga. After a miserable and aborted attempt to switch to PCs a few years earlier, I took an interest in OSes. A magazine I read back then provided the Watchtower distro, and while it was utterly broken, I was fascinated by its alienness. Later, I switched to intel machines, and have kept running Linux as my main OS ever since.
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when I discovered Ubuntu while casually browsing the internet, and that time they even send free CD sent directly to you to try it. After that it's history.
in reply to It's FOSS

Win XP telemetry. Yes im old. I wanted to prove to my employer that windows was not necessary for productivity and it worked.
in reply to It's FOSS

it was around 2006, my friend introduced me to Ubuntu Live, which turned out to be extremely useful whenever my Windows PC failed, so I could get all my files out of it before formatting disc C and reinstalling Win =) And after my previous PC passed away I decided to not install Windows anymore, as it was becoming more and more unusable anyway. It's been 3+ years of Linux only, no regrets!
in reply to It's FOSS

arround 2001. I founded a CD with a magazine , it contains QNX, BeOS and WinLinux2000. I tried all them, but I liked WinLinux on Win98se.
Freedom, no viruses, no cracks, no serials and a lot of curiosity.
I m using Linux since this time. It s an amazing OS.
This entry was edited (6 days ago)
in reply to It's FOSS

Back in 1996 I needed to learn to use (and administer) AIX (IBM's flavor of UNIX) for work without damaging our one AIX box, so I thought, "I hear Linux is like UNIX. I also hear it's free and runs on x86 hardware. I'll give it a shot." I bought a copy of "Linux For Dummies" which included a copy of RHL 6.1, and I was off. By the end of 1997, I was all Linux.
in reply to It's FOSS

the thought that windows was a tricky spywaresystem and decides what you can do with a system and you never own it even if you pay for all their socalled privacy and safety concerns
in reply to It's FOSS

An engineer friend, with whom I used to do C programming, told me one day, "There's a guy in Finland who made a new kernel." It was 1992, and that's when I became passionate about it.
in reply to It's FOSS

My friend has already gone to the cyber limbo of software engineers. And I'm still here tinkering with Linux.
in reply to It's FOSS

The Steam Deck, first being able to run all the games in my library, only 17 didn't work and since then it's down to 12.

Then adding apps via the App Store (package manger?). Being genuinely surprised by things being on there and it really just working like on windows.

Then exploring some of the other stuff on there.

I really want a Steam Phone.

in reply to It's FOSS

The third time Windows had an unrecoverable crash and had to be reinstalled. I had everything backed up, but installing Windows, deleting all the crap that comes with it, reinstalling and configuring all my applications looks hours each time (Windows 95).
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having a bad pc, and I mean bad. It wasn't able to run Windows XP in 2009, so I installed Kurumin 7
in reply to It's FOSS

its zero cost max transparency and freedom is the main reason I use linux I use feodra in my lenovo ideapad slim 3 laptop I am using it for over a year now no issues I faced with my college and personal needs I use librewolf and libreoffice mostly and joplin for notes my entire laptop is full of foss softwares I love them so much just thinking about linux makes me feel alive :underheart:
in reply to It's FOSS

I attended PenguiCon in 2005 which was half sci-fi / half Linux. I was there for the sci-fi music track so only glanced at the Linux part. At the 2007 con, I got a CD of Ubuntu 7.04 to try at home. It did not go well. In 2008, I was given Xubuntu 8.04 and used it on a salvaged laptop off and on for a few years. Moved to Ubuntu 10.04, then faded away when 12.04 and 14.04 failed to run. Tried a few other distros over the next decade, nothing stuck. Now on Mint full time as of fall 2024.
in reply to It's FOSS

"imunity" against malevare/viruses/etc.

Edit; typo

This entry was edited (6 days ago)
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A growing desire culminating in being inspired to boicoting bigtech after a webinar in spring of 2025 by @attacnorge and #Tekna. Trump is a dick 🤛 Long live the international court in the Netherlands and their chief attorney who was blocked by Microslop.
This entry was edited (6 days ago)
in reply to It's FOSS

UNIX / ZENIX like arcitekture And open source. 😁👍
in reply to It's FOSS

Winslop. Haven't fully pulled any triggers yet, but I'm very curious.
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That is was not Windows (2000 / XP around that time). Yes I am this old.
in reply to It's FOSS

it was 1998 and I had recently seen Hackers and War Games.... I wanted to hack the gibson.
in reply to It's FOSS

It was the amount of customizability that Linux DEs had compared to Windows. I wanted to get on that bandwagon too a few years ago.
in reply to It's FOSS

A guy at college gave me the install floppies for Slackware or something back in 1996, and I tried it out 😀
in reply to It's FOSS

I thought Windows (3.1) was bad and the Sun workstations at the university were cool. Plus, I wasn't about to pay for software. Sooo, Linux was the game. I got in at about 0.95pl3 or so, it's been a minute.
in reply to It's FOSS

Main point is that I can use and develop systems on Linux in absence of commercial licenses.
FOSS is usually the way to go, as what is expressed by commercial vendors/licensing when it comes to pricing, conditions, product limitations etc. is outright ridiculous on a regular basis.
This is usually a problem for larger companies that have become dominated by incompetent, parasitic marketing and sales departments who stand between the customer and a solution, ramping up costs while adding no value. These structures also don't inspire confidence in the product. I don't want to waste my time on proprietary products that suddenly become defunct or "AI", or whatever or deal with companies that go bankrupt/get sold every other year.
in reply to It's FOSS

something something #Fedora 3, windows ME?(i think?), #nerd #alwayshavetobedifferent still can't do anything in #linux but i'm not on windows 11 hahahahaha!
in reply to It's FOSS

It kinda just was there, and since being good at computers was my only personality trait(not much changed) back in middle school, I just tried it. Obviously it didn't went well, because that was back in 2017-ish, one year give or take, and I liked playing games. But I vibed with it, so I dual booted until somewhere in 2021-2022, when I already felt like support was good enough, I wiped windows from the hard drive from my old laptop.
in reply to It's FOSS

portable version of Linux and possibility to run on any PC from USB

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