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Don’t be shy

In this article I shall attempt to relive my experience finding, beginning to use; and finally full conversion into a GNU/Linux desktop user. I will enumerate both the frustrations and the pleasures experienced during this first year of use. In an attempt at full disclosure my opinions and bias will be sprinkled throughout; after all this is written entirely from personal perspective. In the end the purpose of writing this is to provide the experience of one local (eastbay) user to any and all people who have started to use, or contemplated using Linux (shortened from Gnu/Linux for brevity) for any reason.
In February of 2009 I was paying money for inferior software, third world phone support, and software to protect me against inferior software.  I had had enough of the frustration wih being infected with spyware, viruses, and expensive proprietary software. And yet how to tumble out of the immense monetary dryer set to Permanent Press? Then a realization buried beneath the frustration finally arrived: the problem wasn’t Micro$oft. It was me. I had been scared of change; sceptical of an operating system being free. So I set out to research what this Linux was. How could an OS be free? Who was doing this? I used the internet for all my research. I read the history of the Gnu project, copyleft, and Linus Torvalds. I learned why it was free and remain grateful. Next I needed to find out if it was for me. To accomplish this I decided to aggregate opinions of everyday Linux users from various websites. Gleaned from across all the blogs, forums, and video posting sites I visited the zeitgeist was ubiquitous: Linux users were elated with their OS. The virtues extolled by most are Linux being virtually virus free, open source, and community oriented.
So I had found a free replacement for the Windoze but it came with a steep learning curve. I ran into problems getting online since at the time I knew nothing about command line interfaces, package managers, or even simply a network manager. This was for my 3G USB dongle I had at the time. All I knew up to that point was plug and play connectivity. I hadn’t been exposed to anything more than click here and here then watch for the spinny thing and a balloon popup notifying me that I was online. I didn’t understand device support or (I had only a notion of) what a driver actually was. I was too soft from allowing myself to be spoon-fed by a Microsoft GUI. Fortunately for me, after a tweak or two, it became easy to get online while using Ubuntu. Next came installing video and audio codecs so that I could watch movies. What I had done before was install movie playing software from CD’s that I had to buy, all wrapped in shiny paper, so that I didn’t have to deal with Windows Media Player. Now, so long as I was online, I could use the free package manager to download free codecs. All it required was a search engine to find out how. After all this I decided to set up dual booting between Ubuntu and Windows. Several months would elapse before I knew enough about using even a ‘desktop-friendly’ distro such as Ubuntu so that I could ditch all the bloatware from my laptop and use Linux as my sole OS. It could have been a lot easier had I simply visited my local Linux user group; but instead, I decided to not ask any questions on a forum or blog and RTFM like I was told to from the old hacker texts I downloaded.
I would like to make this point: you don’t need to go the same route as I did. If you are busy with work, family, and other activities; and also, you would like to actually meet someone in person rather than going back and forth on a Q&A forum, come visit us at the next BerkeleyLUG meeting. This way you can get a feel for the community in general; which in my opinion is great. Or perhaps even more pertinent for someone who wants to try Linux for the first time: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Grantbow/UbuntuForTheVillage. When I, with trepidation at being such a newb, did attend my first meeting I was delighted to find anyone from new users such as myself to advanced users. Some of these advanced users can be seen without even a GUI; they hardly use anything but the command line! That kind of elegance I find fascinating; and it winds my clock aspiring to communicate with my hardware only a layer or two removed from the components as they do.
The free and open source software community and computing in general have propelled me so much that now I find myself yearning to be deeply involved with computerization. In fact I mean to ‘drop out’ of my current profession to pursue a different career. It is my sincere hope that this article will nudge at least someone out of their Redmond, WA induced torpor and into an adventure in the world of FOSS. Please join us at BerkeleyLUG.
P.S. Here is a short glossary of acronyms used:
FOSS – Free and Open Source Software
GNU  – Gnu’s Not Unix
GUI   – Graphical User Interface
LUG   – Linux Users Group
OS     – Operating System
RTFM – Read The F*****g Manual

7 thoughts on “Don’t be shy

  1. I too was lured by GNU/Linux a few years ago, and after a year or two of playing with it and trying out various distros, I switched my career from teaching to computer/server administration and networking. I’ve never been more happy in my career choice.

  2. Thanks for the post! It is great to here new users’ experiences. Perhaps there ought to be some sort of online database for documenting new user experience so, for example, the Ubuntu team knows what problems exist and what things need some polish.

    1. @jdeslip
      That would be interesting. I haven’t heard of this idea before; perhaps we should talk about it further at the next meeting.

  3. Great post! Thanks for the plug for our UC Berkeley student housing event we will be putting on. I hope we can find more hosts to give additional introductory talks like this to users who are interested to learn more. This article is a great summary of your experience and helps remind me of my first experiences. We started talking about which of the old hacker texts you downloaded that you found useful and helpful. Can you please provide links for them so others can (if they want) learn from some of the same sources you have learned from? I bet one of them is http://catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html

    @ grantbow
    Hey thanks! Here’s a link ( http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/5314234/1000_Hacker_Tutorials_2010_-__niral__- ) to a torrent that I grabbed last year; however, this particular grouping of texts has been modified and updated for 2010. I skimmed the list and I see that many text files have been replaced 🙁 Even last year though there were a hefty amount of windoze-based tutorials mixed in that I had to delete. The really great stuff that helped me appreciate the the history of the hacker ethos was dated anywhere from early to late 80’s. Also there were some from the 90’s too. I really had to go through all these with my cherry-picker to get at the juicy stuff. Also please note that these are not the most scrupulous group of texts; however, I didn’t utilize these to learn how to hack per se ( though it is interesting to read about ). For me it was about learning the culture first. Other places I learned from were ‘The Best of 2600: A Hacker Odyssey’, Kevin Mitnick books, ‘Free: The Future of a Radical Price’, and ‘Free as in Freedom’ ( this I read on my android via aldiko as a free download ) about Richard Stallman. Of course I still have a long, long way to go…

  4. I bought my first one of these about a year ago and have been very happy with it. Very simple and cheap with excellent range. No need for repeaters or range extenders. The most complicated thing about it is that it’s not plug-n-play so you have to use the drivers from the CD. Other than that, I highly recommend this device. In fact, I just bought another one.

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