eh?dotout comments on A Bit About Me and Linux http://www.ehdotout.com/ en-us 40 eh?dotout comments "A Bit About Me and Linux": comment by Mo <p>I have gentoo on my machine as dual boot and I&#8217;ve played with and found it really handy and generally linux is the cleaner solution to everything. Unfortunately I&#8217;ve always been a fan of directx for most of my graphics programming so I drift back to windows. But I definitely want to get more into the whole linux side of development. At work I&#8217;m using Make more so then any conventional IDE and working through cygwin. It just seems far more simple to load up a linux distro. We&#8217;re developing for the Nintendo DS. And they distro everything with makefiles. ~Mo</p> Sat, 29 Jul 2006 19:54:00 EDT http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-119 http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-119 "A Bit About Me and Linux": comment by Mo <p>Do you have a tag img or something? I want to put a link to you on my page.</p> Sat, 29 Jul 2006 19:54:00 EDT http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-120 http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-120 "A Bit About Me and Linux": comment by Sean <p>Perhaps this Lunix person can do something about your too-wide photos. ;)</p> Tue, 20 Jun 2006 11:28:01 EDT http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-116 http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-116 "A Bit About Me and Linux": comment by Jason <p> FIXED </p> Tue, 20 Jun 2006 11:28:01 EDT http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-117 http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-117 "A Bit About Me and Linux": comment by D <p>I started writing a similar story in my head about my linux experience.</p> <p>I&#8217;m really enjoying playing with Ubuntu. So much time is saved by not having to compile everything from source, and having well-automated configuration scripting. Not to say that Gentoo isn&#8217;t well-automated&#8212;you just have to watch your step sometimes (which I didn&#8217;t) or else you waste a lot of days repeating junk.</p> <p>I don&#8217;t think I really have sufficient experience to appreciate the many options and choices in gentoo. I&#8217;m tempted to redo my laptop with the xfce version of it ubuntu to make better use of my measely 40MB. Maybe it&#8217;s the smooth attractive graphics, or it&#8217;s all in my head, but ubuntu seems very&#8230; clean.</p> <p>I must say that transitioning into Linux was a lot easier with your guidance. Priceless advice.</p> Tue, 20 Jun 2006 11:28:01 EDT http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-118 http://www.ehdotout.com/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux#comment-118 "A Bit About Me and Linux" by Jason <p>I cleaning out some old junk recently and found some of my old InfoMagic Linux CDs. It sparked some memories from my early days playing with Linux, and I figured it&#8217;d be fun to share.</p> <p>My first experience with Linux was sometime in late 96 or early 97. I think I was in grade 9 at the time. My family&#8217;s main computer was a Pentium 2, our second PC. I had a friend who shared a name with someone who had developed a lot of network card drivers for Linux. This friend brought over a Walnut Creek Slackware CD set. We ran tried it out with a <span class="caps">UMSDOS</span> filesystem and booted it with a floppy disk. It worked, and I think we even got X running. It was totally foreign to me. ls? mv? cp? I was interested enough to buy a Walnut Creek CD set of my own&#8230;</p> <p><a href="/images/blogs/walnutcreek-big.jpg"><img src="/images/blogs/walnutcreek-sm.jpg" alt="" /></a> <br /> <em>The maple leaf is a reflection and not actually on the CD, in case you&#8217;re wondering. I wish I could remember what version my friend had me try. It could have been Slackware 96.</em></p> <p>I caught the Linux bug when I was in high school. During computer classes, I started reading Slashdot, and that got me excited. (My Slashdot <span class="caps">UID</span> is 10414, <span class="caps">BTW</span>.) I was most interested in networking at the time. To get the learning started, I needed some reading material:</p> <p><a href="/images/blogs/linuxbooks-big.jpg"><img src="/images/blogs/linuxbooks-sm.jpg" alt="" /></a></p> <p><em>Discover Linux</em> by Steve Oualline was my first Linux book, and I found it quite helpful. Amazon reviews do not seem to remember it fondly, but it was essential for me. Later on, Matt Welsh&#8217;s book filled in the rest of the gaps.</p> <p>Dial-up networking was the first area where I had some memorable success. The first Grand Theft Auto game only had multiplayer support over <span class="caps">TCP</span>/IP. No modems. And our dial-up internet was not suitable for gaming. So I got my Linux machine to act as a dial-up server. It worked and it was playable, that&#8217;s all I could ask for. Did the same thing with Quake. I had the idea to make a little pseudo-BBS where local people could dial into my machine, share files, post messages, etc&#8230; Always-On broadband, among other technologies, eventually made this unnecessary though.</p> <p>It definitely was more a hobby thing though. Never even thought of it as my primary desktop OS. It was all experimentation; very few installations lasted more than a couple months before being wiped out in a favour of an exciting new distribution. Whenever we travelled up to Edmonton, I&#8217;d head out to the Compusmart right near the Mayfield Inn to buy the latest InfoMagic Linux Developer&#8217;s Resource:</p> <p><a href="/images/blogs/infomagic-big.jpg"><img src="/images/blogs/infomagic-sm.jpg" alt="" /></a> <em>This was before broadband&#8230; When CD burners were more than $500. InfoMagic.com is now just placeholder.</em></p> A couple other times Linux has been the best tool for the job: <ul> <li>I bought an older computer from a friend. It had no video, so I through in a super old that I got for free. It didn&#8217;t work well with will Windows 95, but it Just Worked with Linux. I was able to run X at 640&#215;480 with 16 colour. It was good enough to view some moon maps with Netscape. I had the binoculars setup on a tripod pointing out the window and the monitor on the other side.</li> <li>Itwas certainly an advantage to be able to do all my assignments for my operating systems locally instead of remotely.</li> <li>Working with vi in the console on your old 14 inch monitor is the only way to develop for the Atmel <span class="caps">AVR</span>&#8230; Unless you have a green screen.</li> <li>An old Pentium running <a href="http://www.smoothwall.org/">SmoothWall</a> is infinitely better than the cheap router that previously used.</li> </ul> <p>Now Linux is indispensable. It&#8217;s on my development machine at work and all of our servers. At home I use it for any of the cool stuff. (The boring stuff is best left for Mac <span class="caps">OS X</span>.) Couldn&#8217;t live without it.</p> <p>And whaddaya know, I&#8217;m right back where I started, using Slackware.</p> Sun, 16 Jul 2006 18:47:00 EDT <a href="/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux">A Bit About Me and Linux</a> <a href="/articles/2006/07/16/a-bit-about-me-and-linux">A Bit About Me and Linux</a>