I really wish that I was born early so I’ve could witness the early years of Linux. What was it like being there when a kernel was released that would power multiple OSes and, best of all, for free?

I want know about everything: software, hardware, games, early community, etc.

  • sprite0@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    stacks of diskettes, for every operating system.

    would routinely spend hours doing an install only to hit a block and have to reinstall DOS to have modem access to get help on usenet. Then hours of reinstalling to move forward and repeat on another issue.

    I really loved it though, it was a massive upgrade over DOS and windows on a 286.

  • chargen@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    Before modularized kernels became the standard I was constantly rerunning “make menuconfig” and recompiling to try different options, or more likely adding something critical back in :-D

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Clumsy. Manual. No multimedia support really. Compiling everything on 486 machines took hours.

    Can’t say I look back fondly on it.

    BeOS community was fucking awesome though. That felt like the cutting edge at the time.

    • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      I can’t remember much about it now, but I remember really wanting BeOS. I managed to get it installed once, but couldn’t get the internet working, so ended up uninstalling it.

    • sramder@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I desperately wanted one of those first BeBoxes or whatever they were called. And one of those little SGI toasters… I even tried to compile SGI’s 3D file manager (demo) from Jurassic Park.

      Herp derp… where can I download an OpenGL from… it keeps saying I can’t build it without one 🤤

    • randomcruft@lemmy.sdf.org
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      3 months ago

      I’m sure most are aware of this but, just incase anyone passing through is not… Haiku OS

      Works great in a VM… fun to play with, have not tried bare metal / daily driving it though.

      • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Yeah, I’ve tried it out. It’s just years behind any Linux desktop right now though. The entire point of BeOS was to be a multimedia powerhouse, and it was. Everything else has surpassed it at this point though.

  • PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social
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    3 months ago

    All my homies who were into it were like “everything is free you just have to compile it yourself”

    And I was like “sounds good but I cannot”

    Then all the cool distros got mature and feature laden.

    If you were a competent computer scientist it was rad.

    If you were a dummy like me who just wanted to play star craft and doom you wasted a lot of time and ended up reinstalling windows.

    • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I learned how to make a dual boot machine first.

      My friend wanted to get me to install it, but he had a 2nd machine to run Windows on. So we figured out how to dual boot.

      And then we learned how to fix windows boot issues 😮‍💨

      We mostly did it for the challenge. Those Linux Magazine CDs with new distros and software were a monthly challenge of “How can I install this and also not destroy my ability to play Diablo?”

      I definitely have lost at least one install to getting stuck in vim, flailing the keyboard and writing garbage data into a critical config file before rebooting.

      Modern Linux is amazing in comparison, you can use it for essentially any task and it still has a capacity for customization that is astonishing.

      The early days were interesting if you like getting lost in the terminal and figuring things out without a search engine. Lots of trial and error, finding documentation, reading documentation, etc.

      It was interesting, but be glad you have access to modern Linux. There’s more to explore, better documentation, and the capabilities that you can pull in are still astonishing.

  • Shadow@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    You got it from a friend on a pile of slackware and floppies labeled various letters. It felt amazing and fresh, everything you could need was just a floppy away.

    Then we got Gentoo and suddenly it was fun to wait 4 days to compile your kernel.

    • WhatsHerBucket@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I remember my first Slackware installation from a pile of floppy disks!

      I also remember that nothing worked after the installation, I had to figure out how to roll my own kernel and compile all the drivers. Kids today have it too easy.

      shakes fist Now get offa ma lawn!

    • JaxNakamura@programming.dev
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      3 months ago

      I remember I had over one hundred floppies to install it all. And those were just for the stuff I was interested in. This was circa 1996. I bought Red Hat 5.0 a year or so later. It came on 4 CD-ROM’s and was cheaper than that pile of floppies had been.

    • limer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      I tried compiling gentoo a bit later, upgraded from windows 95. Could never get to a login screen, I quit, and started using Linux later when it was easier to install

            • ocean@lemmy.selfhostcat.com
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              3 months ago

              There is no formal issue tracking system and no official procedure to become a code contributor or developer. The project does not maintain a public code repository. Bug reports and contributions, while being essential to the project, are managed in an informal way. All the final decisions about what is going to be included in a Slackware release strictly remain with Slackware’s benevolent dictator for life, Patrick Volkerding.

              • 4z01235@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                That doesn’t make the source code proprietary or non-open, it just means it isn’t a community driven project.

                • superkret@feddit.org
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                  3 months ago

                  It is a community-driven project, but there is no structured way to join.
                  You can become a member of the community when Patrick Volkerding or one of the lead devs ask you.
                  I’ve been in contact with them for a while and ultimately decided against contributing.
                  They acted too much like old men when you step on their lawn, and I don’t see the point in this distro anymore, apart from it being a blast from the past.
                  Literally everything it does is done better by others now.

              • Jess@lemmy.world
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                3 months ago

                That’s just the way things were done back then. Slack has been around long enough that that’s just the way it is.

  • BOFH666@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Alrighty, old Linux user from the earliest of days.

    It was fun, really great to have one-on-one with Linus when Lilo gave issues with the graphic card and the screen kept blank during booting.

    It was new, few fellow students where interested, but the few that did, all have serious jobs in IT right know.

    Probably the mindset and the drive to test out new stuff, combined with the power Linux gave.

  • weaponG@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    No audio, no WiFi, no well-established communities, sparse software selection, but total freedom on an alternate OS. I tried it out in the late 90s with Red Hat, left, came back about 5 years later in the early 2000s and stayed forever. SuSE 9.2 was amazing.

  • floo@retrolemmy.com
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    3 months ago

    Honestly, it sucked. Like most computing at the time. Everything came on a ton of floppy disks, it was impossible to update online unless you had a good connection (which nobody did), and you had to do everything by hand, including compiling a lot of stuff which took forever. I mean, I’m glad I got the experience, but I would never wanna go back to that. It sucked.

    • d00phy@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Remember when packages like RPM were first introduced, and it was like, “cool, I don’t have to compile everything!” Then you were introduced to Red Hat’s version of DLL-Hell when the RPM couldn’t find some obsure library! Before YUM, rpmfind.net was sooo useful!

      • floo@retrolemmy.com
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        3 months ago

        Shit like that was the last straw for me and I ended up bailing on Linux for, like, 10 years until I got back into it around 2006.

      • catloaf@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        I still use pkgs.org pretty frequently when I need to find versions of packages and their dependencies across different distros and versions of distros. I had to use that to sneakernet something to fix a system just this past week.

        • d00phy@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Oh sites like that are absolutely still useful! Especially for older distros or when you need a specific version that you can’t find for whatever reason.

    • TFO Winder@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      Remember the slow internet jad to wait overnight for 40 megabyte game and finally finding out it didn’t work.

  • sramder@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Spent a week getting the audio driver to work so I could finally figure out how to properly pronounce “Linux…” and I still couldn’t.

    Spent like $50 on floppy disks and like 2 days labeling them by hand before printing out the 20 pages of instructions, formatting my hard drive and installing Slackware. Realized I didn’t actually know any unix commands. Paged a friend.

  • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    The first time I encountered Linux was around 2007. I was just a kid in the 1990’s. None of my family had a computer science or programming affiliation. My dad worked for a company that made industrial plants and was an electrician. I got several old x286 through x386 desktops mostly in pieces for free as a result. I pieced these together to build our family’s first computers. I built stuff from the Windows 3.1 through XT era like this. I really only cared about AOL instant messanger, hotmail, MySpace, Age of Empires, Worms, Rollercoaster Tycoon, Star Craft, and Command and Conquer. So I had no real reason to search for alternatives. I think most of the Linux world revolves around networking and academics. Most people did not get into Linux unless they crossed these spaces. That kinda changed when M$ started deprecating hardware around the time of Windows 8, and adding native stalkerware ads nonsense. These give motivations that did not exist in the past. Also, it is very hard to understand how small computing and the internet were before the early 2000’s. You could not transfer media. This is why Linux distros on a CD were a thing. Most people had dialup connections. Let’s say you Jake an 8k image of 81922. That is 67m bits. If you were somehow capable of using the maximum theoretical bit rate of a 56k dialup modem, it would take 1200 seconds to load that image (20 minutes). In practice, triple that number, and pray for stability during the entire connection which was quite rare in a residential area. Back then, if you were downloading anything and the connection dropped, your file failed and you had to start over. So the primary way most people acquired software of any kind was in a brick and mortar retail store. Like Napster was super novel at the time as the first time a bit torrent client could be download and just worked without configuration complexity. It was a very different time. Like newspapers were a big part of life. The local classified ads were the primary way to find a job, a first car, and what was going on in your region. Any kind of real knowledge depth required making a trip to the local library.

  • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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    3 months ago

    It wasn’t too early, maybe 1997.

    I was like 12 or so and I had just installed Linux.

    I figured out, from the book I was working with, how to get my windows partition to automaticallyount at boot. Awesome!

    I had not been able to figure out how to start “x” though.

    So I rebooted into Windows, for on EFnet #linux, and asked around.

    Got a command, wrote it down on a slip of paper, and rebooted into Linux.

    I should mention, I also hadn’t figured out about privileges, or at least why you wouldn’t want to run around as root.

    Anyway, I started typing in the command that I wrote down: rm -rf /.

    I don’t have to tell you all, that is not the correct command. The correct command was startx.

    After I figured it was taking way too long, I decided to look up what the command does, and then immediately shut down the system.

    It was far too late.

    • Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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      3 months ago

      My pranks were less destructive … /ctcp nick +++ath0+++ … it was amazing how often that worked. 🤣

      • sramder@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        PRESS ALT+F4 for ops! 😂

        OMG… the showmanship…

        Someone-being-bratty-on-IRC: […]
        Me: We’re going to take away your internet access if you don’t behave. 
        Bratty: Fuck you! You can’t do tha
        5 minutes later…
        Bratty: How did you do that??? 
        
        
      • StrawberryPigtails@lemmy.sdf.org
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        3 months ago

        Thats a new one on me. What did that do if I may ask? Best I have been able to figure out is that it’s probably IRC related but that’s it.

          • dan@upvote.au
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            3 months ago

            Wow, a post from 2001 that’s still online today. You don’t see that often any more!

        • dan@upvote.au
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          3 months ago

          +++ath0 is a command that tells a dial up modem to disconnect. I’ve never seen it used in IRC this way, but my guess is that the modem would see this coming from the computer and disconnect.

          This was back in the days when everything was unencrypted.

          • catloaf@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            Yes, and encryption had nothing to do with it (though I suppose it would have prevented it in this case).

            A properly configured modem would ignore this coming from the Internet side, or escape the characters so that they didn’t form that string.

            • dan@upvote.au
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              3 months ago

              Encryption would prevent it - that’s what I meant :)

              I think the trick is to convince someone to send that string, so the modem sees it coming from the computer. Similar to tricking someone into pressing Alt+F4, or Ctrl+Alt+Del twice on Windows 9x (instantly reboots without prompting).

              • Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlM
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                3 months ago

                encryption would prevent the modem from seeing it when someone sends it, but such a short string will inevitably appear once in a while in ciphertext too. so, it would actually make it disconnect at random times instead :)

                (edit: actually at seven bytes i guess it would only occur once in every 72PB on average…)

    • sramder@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      That’s terrible! They helped me fix my system when I decided I was fancy enough to try building a new version of gcc and go off-script a bit.

      IIRC I deleted library.so rather that overwriting it. If I hadn’t been running IRC on another terminal already I would have been done for.

  • azron@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    The danger of poorly configuring your XF86Config in a way that could irreparably damage your giant CRT monitor was thrilling.

  • wallybeavis@lemmings.world
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    3 months ago

    Prior to the website rpmfind.net, installing software was to put it mildly, a chore. Due to package dependency, you’d start the compile, and it would fail due to missing libraries. You’d then go out and find those libraries, only to have them fail on compile…due to missing libraries…it would go on like until you finally were able to compile the original package - at this point though you compiled it out of sheer spite for the universe that put you in that position.

    I rate the experience a solid 5/7