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Linux turned 33 today!! 🐧 🎂

Share your favorite moment using Linux with us!

#linux

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
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The Moment I helped a good friend get his printer/scanner combo working on #EndeavourOSLinux
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more than 15 years using Linux. Cannot count the amount of moments I could mark as favorite, but among them I'd say I'd keep the huge number of services I run for my self independently of the "cloud-based vamp your user data" trend.

Thanks, Linux!

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: J'ai un très bon souvenir des rencontres au BxLUG ( https://www.bxlug.be/ ) il y a une vingtaine d'année avec @LViatour , dans les locaux de l'ULB.

On commeçait par nettoyer les restes des guindailles estudiantines avant d'installer les tables et les ordis.🥹

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My favourite bit about Linux is not being tied to companies for your data.
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My first "wow" moment with Linux was around 1996-1997, the first time I ran lunar lander on Yggrasil Linux while compiling something and it was running so smooth. Real preemptive multitasking was an eye opener.
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maybe not significant but I remember when I installed Linux on a laptop that used to run with Windows and I noticed higher data transfer speeds via the USB ports to the same external devices.
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First happy birthday linux 🥳🥳🥳 Second my fav time is ricing and security while surfing youtube
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Back in 1999 at my first real job, I was given the task to maintain two classrooms full of Windows PCs that also had all kinds of expensive design software installed. Instead of managing each machine on its own (a massive headache!), I decided to create a single master machine and clone it to all the others every time I changed something substantial. 1/2
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
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Flatpak install software with one command and type y
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
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using #Linux for almost 20 years, and my favorite moment is not a single one but the daily usage!
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Sometime during the mid 90s, my computer had like a 170 MB harddisk, so I patched e2compr into my kernel to save a bit of space. But later, I somehow destroyed my kernel, and no other kernel on any installation medium could mount my compressed filesystem. So I had to ride my bike to a friend, the only other Linux user I knew, and use his computer to compile a new patched kernel to get my machine back up, a task that used to take many, many hours back then. But it worked.
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Linux is 33 and I’m 47! Didn’t know we shared a birthday
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
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Gentoo installs, ive never been successful since one reason or another and that caused frustration but in the end I was happy that I atleast learnt the basics 🙏

Going to try gentoo out again in a year or two !

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Installing my first distro, Mint, on a W XP machine and seeing how well it worked. Then later installing Arch and learning more in two weeks about Linux than I had in two years before. And finally getting the compiz cube up and running! 😁
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every single distro hop and mandatory ricing. That feeling is unbeatable for me.
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A few years ago I decided to install Debian GNU+Linux on my computer as the sole operating system. No dual-boot/VM's. I instantly felt home. Never looked back.
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When I discovered LXC containers, which you can stuff all your (local/home) services in that don't require regular upgrades, and which you can keep untouched through upgrades of the base system.

Also extremely useful for build environments that require all kinds of dependencies you don't want to pollute your base system with.

That was a great moment indeed. Made life so much easier and pleasant.

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Still is the first time getting 0.99.13r kernel running on an i386.

A not too distant second is today where I can use kvm and libvirt to quickly get my own live vm with a lot more power than my original Linux system. Without any cloud provider taking a share of the cut…

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
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The first time I realized I was updating at the same time without my computer being locked from my being able to work on other things.
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That was yesterday. After using #Linux for more than a decade on smaller servers for home projects like DNS, Radius, a Wiki and more, I decided to go for #Debian on my brand new laptop.

Installation went smoothly and was completed in less than 20 minutes, with all hardware working immediately.

There is so much to like that it would not fit into a reasonable number of posts 😇

From the speed to the desktop environment, the available applications and easy to use customization options.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to It's FOSS

When i noticed as an visual artist and video editor it runs even better than #apple products on all even older machines ;)

Thank you, #developers, #developers, #developers!!!
Whohooooooooo!
I love this nerd company!

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
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In 1997 when I installed Linux first time, and I managed to start X11, which wasn't easy.
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I nearly went insane as I tried to compile Tensorflow on a Windows machine. I couldn't belive how easy and well it worked on the first run after switching the machine to Linux. Never ever have I tried again to develop something on Windows, except using WSL 2 😁
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@sustainrelease For a complete beginner like me, who would rather do everything with a graphical interface and never ever ever type a command, #MXLinux is wonderful.
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I think it’s still my first time using Linux: twenty-odd years back I was very poor, and the hand-me-down laptop I was using died (and I obviously couldn’t afford a replacement). A techie friend diagnosed HDD death, gave me a Knoppix CD-R and showed me how to boot from it, and I suddenly had a laptop I could use again for however long it took for someone else to upgrade their computer and pass the old one on to me. Bloody marvellous.
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