"How did you first get into Linux?"

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  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2024
  • Here's the story of how I became a Lincuck: it involves BoomerOS (Windows 95), Civilization II, n00buntu, Gentoo, Manjaro, ThinkPads, my thesis, vim and LaTeX. I talk about why I started using it after many years of knowing that it was out there, and what makes GNU/Linux unique.
    WEBSITE: lukesmith.xyz 🌐❓🔎
    DONATE NOW: lukesmith.xyz/... 💰😎👌💯

Комментарии • 517

  • @bruderdasisteinschwerermangel
    @bruderdasisteinschwerermangel 4 года назад +1013

    It is endlessly meme worthy that Lukes dad is a gentoo user

    • @milesrout
      @milesrout 4 года назад +46

      My dad was a gentoo user

    • @migkillerphantom
      @migkillerphantom 4 года назад +51

      @@milesrout good that you disowned that dumb fuck

    • @connorazzarello5514
      @connorazzarello5514 3 года назад +8

      Can someone explain the meme-y part of this? Is it just that there's no tangible reason to compile everything yourself?

    • @sethgrubb926
      @sethgrubb926 3 года назад +3

      @@connorazzarello5514 Because its about the freedom to do everything about the system

    • @rodrigosouto9502
      @rodrigosouto9502 3 года назад +16

      Luke's dad must be a hell of a neckbeard XD

  • @dutchdaedalus
    @dutchdaedalus 4 года назад +816

    >CLICKING ON BUTTONS
    >WEARING RALPH LAUREN (knock off?)
    >HATING ON NERDS
    >DISLIKING LINUX
    >WINDOWS 95 SUPREMACY
    we are reaching levels of normie not thought possibe.

    •  4 года назад +61

      Normie extremism.

    • @mezcel953
      @mezcel953 4 года назад +32

      lol. Your list is a few points short of the Generation-X Hipster checklist. All that's missing is brooding nihilism and a flannel shirt tied around the waste.

    • @crausbeat
      @crausbeat 3 года назад +4

      That's USPA, not a Ralph Lauren.

    • @noisetide
      @noisetide 3 месяца назад

      RUclips showed me "Translate to English" specifically for your comment xD

  • @gery49
    @gery49 4 года назад +265

    I'm at the Manjaro with i3 stage. Soon I'll have to get an old Thinkpad and move out to the woods...

    • @garkeinen7034
      @garkeinen7034 3 года назад +29

      I got the Thinkpad and then decided to get ínto Linux. Seems like there's a bond between Linux and that machine!
      To assure you: With exchangable batteries that many models feature you may stay in the woods for long enogh to come back as an Arch user

    • @marcuscooper7550
      @marcuscooper7550 2 года назад +3

      I love scratchpad on i3.

  • @SimGunther
    @SimGunther 4 года назад +561

    10:12 "It sounds a lot more complicated, but it's actually a lot more easy"
    - A linguist with a PHD who uses GNU/Linux

    • @tbxmb
      @tbxmb 4 года назад +45

      GNU + Linux*

    • @rexevan6714
      @rexevan6714 4 года назад +137

      PhD + Linux

    • @zigginzag584
      @zigginzag584 4 года назад +28

      If you're supporting a previous statement, "more easy" is grammatically correct and even preferred.
      If you're not supporting a previous statement, "more easy" is still grammitcally correct, but less commonly used.

    • @bradywb98
      @bradywb98 4 года назад +8

      P.h.D candidate *

    • @bradywb98
      @bradywb98 4 года назад

      hytwoxy I believe that he’s no longer in his program? Not sure. He’s in Florida now.

  • @iii-ei5cv
    @iii-ei5cv 4 года назад +137

    "Vim on Windows... I was very confused at the beginning"
    yes

  • @jamesm5192
    @jamesm5192 4 года назад +282

    Father Gentoo user produces biological child process that uses Arch! Boom!

    • @devikapluspoint8306
      @devikapluspoint8306 3 года назад +8

      He uses artix.

    • @solarwolf678
      @solarwolf678 3 года назад +1

      @@devikapluspoint8306 its basically arch tho it's just it isnt soyware

  • @morgulbrut
    @morgulbrut 4 года назад +467

    I had a crush on a girl who run Linux, 15 years back. So i needed to install it too, because reasons.

    • @AntonioRonde
      @AntonioRonde 4 года назад +41

      morgulbrut firm and bouncy dd reasons

    • @lucioinnocenzo2328
      @lucioinnocenzo2328 4 года назад +160

      A woman using Linux? You're such a liar.

    • @eli7693
      @eli7693 4 года назад +236

      >women
      >anything computers
      Pick one

    • @mezcel953
      @mezcel953 4 года назад +52

      A Crush on a girl work 10x better than Evangelism. Linux... step your game up. lol

    • @wtechninja3953
      @wtechninja3953 4 года назад +14

      this is the best reason

  • @nateedwards1313
    @nateedwards1313 4 года назад +143

    Dual booting paradox: If you know what your doing you wouldn't do it.

    • @afivey
      @afivey 4 года назад +30

      It's a little shame every time you see a reminder of that chunk of memory dedicated to something else that you don't use.

    • @aereleus3262
      @aereleus3262 3 года назад +3

      i thought your profile picture was sam hyde for a sec

    • @charlesbenca5357
      @charlesbenca5357 3 года назад +2

      @@afivey yeah i have an ssd 100% formated in ntsf and i have linux installed in my old computer's hdd. i've been using exclusively linux for at least 5 months now. i'm thinking about installing linux on the ssd, but i just want to keep windows fucking 10 for some dark reasons, idk.

    • @axton9521
      @axton9521 3 года назад +5

      There are some people that need it for work or games.

    • @1111Tactical
      @1111Tactical 2 года назад +1

      I literally only boot up windows for gaming. I know what I am doing, and although Proton/Wine has come improved so much it's mind-blowing, for 99% of games it runs better on windows and Anticheat makes multiplayer unusable for Linux users still for many games.

  • @marciomaiajr
    @marciomaiajr 4 года назад +317

    Luke recorded this video because he's about to switch to FreeBSD.

    • @DetectiveAme
      @DetectiveAme 4 года назад +60

      OpenBSD for maximum autism.

    • @rexevan6714
      @rexevan6714 4 года назад +31

      After seeing him move to Bspwm, it ls only a matter of time

    • @jascoolo
      @jascoolo 4 года назад +10

      Installed FreeBSD to view pictures and it couldn't do such a simple task proparly

    • @ibrudiiv
      @ibrudiiv 4 года назад +14

      @@jascoolo Why would you install a BSD flavor to view pictures O.o

    • @jascoolo
      @jascoolo 4 года назад +3

      @@ibrudiiv As an artist I've got one old laptop just to view pictures and I was tired of linux, which was working way too loud

  • @milijanmosic5189
    @milijanmosic5189 4 года назад +79

    I'm so glad that I found this channel a year, or 2, ago...
    Today I was watching the "cabin tour" video (besides other videos), and I gotta say: maaaan, you are living a life that I want to live in the future...
    > living in nature (walking in the woods and such xd): check,
    > growing your own food: check,
    > your own home: check,
    > rambling about tech and software etc: check.
    > memes?!: check!
    What makes this channel unique is that we can just close our eyes and listen to your thought process. The way you think and why you have the opinion that you have... it's just awesome.
    I was hesitating to make this comment (idk why, maybe it will look like an "I'm your biggest fan" comment (I hope that it doesn't)) but I've decided to do so. I'm hoping that you'll see it and just continue to make these videos.
    Also, the other comments here are just priceless... so much laughing, so much truth.
    Anyway, to all of you out there, greetings from Serbia.

  • @George-lt6jy
    @George-lt6jy 4 года назад +103

    the "straw" for me was that I had enough of this "anti-malware service executable"".

    • @teachies902
      @teachies902 3 года назад +17

      i was dabbling in linux because i heard that it was great for c development. i was switching back and forth because apt seemed alien to me. reinstalling windows because i was such a n00b then, i realized how much personal info windows wanted. first, it would ask me to connect to the internet. it then *saved* that information so that it could persist through restarting the installation process, because having connection to microsoft servers is such a cardinal priority to the windows installation. then it would force me to give personal information and make a microsoft account, which again required personal information. that was the last straw for me. since i switched to linux mint, i learned so much more about c, the unix philosophy in practice, how much freedom i was missing out on, and how good it feels without excessive bloatware, integrated advertisements, corporate collusion (im looking at you, microsoft defender), and the distrust that comes of closed source software in my very operating system.
      yes i know this is a year old. maybe others might find it interesting

    • @George-lt6jy
      @George-lt6jy 3 года назад +4

      @@teachies902 1 year later still feel the same

    • @theitatit
      @theitatit 3 года назад +12

      I replaced it with my own exe which was just an empty C program "int main() { return 0; }" And then my CPU stopped getting 100% usage for no f***** reason

    • @skybldev
      @skybldev 3 года назад +2

      Holy crap. One of the main driving forces for me too! I hated that damn service with a passion.
      Moral of the story: You don't need a service to remove malware if your system barely has any :)

    • @idkidc7513
      @idkidc7513 2 года назад +2

      Mine was that I had a really bad machine that came with win8 pre-installed and it ran like dogshit, so I googled alternatives for windows and learned what linux is

  • @NotOrdinaryInGames
    @NotOrdinaryInGames 4 года назад +103

    Arch used to be a meme distro. Now it is THE distro.
    Memes become reality.

    • @aaaaeeeeffffeeeekkkkssss
      @aaaaeeeeffffeeeekkkkssss 2 года назад +12

      @wzeyctfvgtgfryc Only if everyone has 3rd gen Threadrippers for doing basic office tasks, then the compile time wouldn't be that bad.

  • @Aikidox49
    @Aikidox49 4 года назад +68

    I became a full Linux user when I discovered this channel

    • @mezcel953
      @mezcel953 4 года назад +5

      this channel got me started on the "suckless" bandwagon. ST + DWM = 4 + Life

    • @NostraDavid2
      @NostraDavid2 4 года назад +3

      I was trying to find informative FreeBSD channels. Got this one instead. I'm OK with this.

    • @ricardo5622
      @ricardo5622 4 года назад +1

      @NostraDavid ibsd and robonuggie are two decent feeebsd channels

  • @fabiobcm
    @fabiobcm 4 года назад +118

    Here in Brazil a lot of People that during the 90s were a teenager was introduced to Linux with a Brazillian distro called Kurumin (child in Indigenous Guarani) that was sold with a magazine on newsstands.

  • @neonblood4658
    @neonblood4658 4 года назад +219

    Papa Luke is a gentoo user

    • @ultrahalf
      @ultrahalf 4 года назад +18

      Gentoo gang

    • @issamramdani825
      @issamramdani825 4 года назад +1

      @@ultrahalf 😂😂😂

    • @humm535
      @humm535 4 года назад +1

      @José Tobias Well ... OpenBSD or LFS?

  • @azngoku666
    @azngoku666 4 года назад +55

    "it was like, so boring, or whatever" very 90s way of putting that

  • @shadowoftiger116
    @shadowoftiger116 3 года назад +68

    I'll be honest, hearing that Luke only has roughly 4-5 years of experience with Linux makes me feel more confident that these OS concepts will come to me in time

    • @fakename3208
      @fakename3208 Год назад +1

      How goes it now? I have no idea how to break into all this stuff, or even why. All I know is that I don’t like the big tech companies and don’t trust them at all.
      Written from my iPhone btw…help

    • @naoltitude9516
      @naoltitude9516 Год назад +1

      @@fakename3208 iPhones are good, don't sew distrust without first garnering understanding

    • @fakename3208
      @fakename3208 Год назад

      @@naoltitude9516 It tracks where I am even when it’s off. It’s constantly listening to me. It costs hundreds of dollars and I can’t fix it myself when it breaks. It wants to know the shape of my face. It’s CEO is unwittingly satanic. I can’t even uninstall safari (trying to make a “dumb phone” out of it).
      I don’t trust apple at all.

    • @avsbq
      @avsbq 4 месяца назад +1

      @@fakename3208 How goes it now for you?

  • @Chronologist89
    @Chronologist89 4 года назад +52

    My final switch to Linux was probably thanks to this channel. Obviously I had known about Linux for a long time and I have always been dissatisfied with how cryptic Windows makes configuration seem. However, I never found a compelling introduction or overview of the possibilities. Only when I saw here how simple and easy setting up and configuring Linux can be when you start from a minimalist distribution is when I comitted all the way. So I guess what I am trying to say is: Thank you.

  • @samuelschwager
    @samuelschwager 4 года назад +29

    Much respect for Luke's pop for using Gentoo!

  • @TheZMDX
    @TheZMDX 4 года назад +62

    You are absolutely right. I often do some work on Arch Linux with i3 before classes and it gets a lot of attention, people often ask me "how did you get your system to look and do something so cool?" and when I tell them that it's linux with window manager they are often surprised that you can do that kind of stuff on linux.

    • @AIC_onyt
      @AIC_onyt Год назад +3

      same. its become a meme in my school friendgroup, that every time they see a computer with a terminal, they say
      looks like you installed linux again.
      gets me every time XD

  • @Gornius
    @Gornius 4 года назад +36

    What you hear when someone talks about minimalism when you're Windows user: "Yeah, I am just a hipster and from time to time I want to throw out some words no one can't understand".
    What you hear when someone talks about minimalism when you're Linux user: "At some point you realize you don't need like 90% of things you think you use".

  • @cylepsycc1050
    @cylepsycc1050 4 года назад +24

    The place you live is so beautiful. It looks like those default wallpapers coming with OS. If I had a view like that I can get up early every Saturday morning. I’m living in Tokyo and am so jealous of you. What we’ve got at 8am on Saturday are groups of noisy crows, salary-man having hang over, and desperate traffic. I just want to stay in bed and try to get far away from them as I can.

    • @ariathyf144
      @ariathyf144 4 года назад +7

      You can enjoy wonderful views if you just get out of the big cities.
      Tokyo landscape has a depressing mood due to overcrowd and lack of WILD nature.

    • @nykal1510
      @nykal1510 3 года назад +1

      The tree rows are out of place, unattractive

    • @bryceforsythe8072
      @bryceforsythe8072 3 года назад +1

      @@nykal1510 it's a tree farm. They're actually too "in place" (aligned)

    • @nykal1510
      @nykal1510 3 года назад +1

      @@bryceforsythe8072 I know, that's why I don't really think it's pretty, it's obviously unnatural. If OP likes it that's fine of course

  • @PacAnimal
    @PacAnimal 4 года назад +21

    I've been dual booting my main work/gaming rig from Win98/Debian Potato all the way to Win10/Buster today.
    It's absolutely worth it, and helps me use my most powerful machine for gaming on Windows and work on Linux. It helps keep separation and it helps you not fire up a quick game and procrastinate. You're missing out.

    • @a.artbart3020
      @a.artbart3020 Год назад +5

      Nah he’s not he doesn’t game

    • @kelvinpina3392
      @kelvinpina3392 Год назад

      I had a setup like this but I was getting addicted to competitive games (valorant, call of duty etc..) My main reason for linux it's that I cannot play those games anymore. I still game though but not those kind of games

  • @iii-ei5cv
    @iii-ei5cv 4 года назад +10

    My argument for Linux and for open systems in general is that the design philosophy is based on the idea that the user *should* be allowed MORE control over their devices, instead of having the devices dictate user experience (ie Mac philosophy)

  • @polymath_praxis
    @polymath_praxis 4 года назад +10

    Demo disc on a magazine was my gateway drug. Fedora 5 I believe. Miss breaking the family computer so bad.

  • @bahathir_
    @bahathir_ 4 года назад +11

    Thos days circa late 1990s, I rememberd creating my own small Linux system for dailup+gateway on a 3.5" floppy disk. Yes, 1.44 MB is enough for proper minimal Liinux system. The best thing was, it loded into RAM and the floppy disk can be ejected. It was the true meaning of minimalist. :)

  • @daveshouldaine2520
    @daveshouldaine2520 3 года назад +5

    can anyone explain me why Lenin rants about how he did get into Linux?

  • @xGOKOPx
    @xGOKOPx 4 года назад +25

    Just note that programs from the AUR can be harmful too

  • @peterjansen4826
    @peterjansen4826 4 года назад +147

    "Think different". Apple claims it, Linux delivers it.

    • @lucioinnocenzo2328
      @lucioinnocenzo2328 4 года назад +11

      Think stupid (Linux)

    • @tnetroP
      @tnetroP 4 года назад +12

      Linux + Thinkpad = Think Different

    • @NostraDavid2
      @NostraDavid2 4 года назад +15

      The only one who thought different was Terry A. Davis. RIP.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 4 года назад +13

      @@lucioinnocenzo2328 you missed a coma. It is Think, stupid.

    • @peterjansen4826
      @peterjansen4826 4 года назад

      @@user-fw5uh5ne3o It is not the high price which is a problem, it is the low value/$ which people don't like. The OS is just based on (Free)BSD with their own GUI on top of it. The GUI is not bad but also not any better than many alternatives.

  • @xGOKOPx
    @xGOKOPx 4 года назад +35

    16:21
    *Don't swear on our Christian Minecraft server*

    • @duminicad
      @duminicad 4 года назад +1

      sir, do you have a moment to talk about our lord and saviour TMUX?!

  • @neodonkey
    @neodonkey 4 года назад +2

    Gen-Xer here. Started with HPUX, then worked with Solaris, AIX, Tru64. Then starting running Linux at home when Linux was at kernel 2.0 version I think. Later worked with Linux in dayjob. Run both Linux and NetBSD currently. Nice to see you young folk enjoying UNIX :-)

  • @harrymason1053
    @harrymason1053 4 года назад +3

    I started using Linux in 1992. It was Slackware. I think the kernel was .92 or something but I don't really remember. We had to download it onto 1.44mb diskettes. Now I'm a Windows 10 user but I still play with Linux.

  • @polymath_praxis
    @polymath_praxis 4 года назад +95

    >pronouncing GNOME as "gnome" to flex on pedants
    I respect and fear it.

    • @DrathVader
      @DrathVader 4 года назад +44

      I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you’re referring to as GNOME, is in fact, GAHNOUM, or as I’ve recently taken to calling it, GAHNOUM plus systemd.

    • @keltonnewman4052
      @keltonnewman4052 4 года назад +4

      He can say GNOME properly, but he can't say Ubuntu correctly. I'm Just saying. Even so, I liked the video immensely.

  • @tekvax01
    @tekvax01 4 года назад +3

    Been using Linux daily since 1994 Yggdrasil distribution on a 0.94 pre-beta kernel!
    I still have the original CDROM around somewhere!

  • @dlarge6502
    @dlarge6502 4 года назад +4

    I started in about '96 shortly after building my first PC. Tried a load of distros, as you do, learned about the FSF and GNU and became pretty dedicated to the ideals of Free Software. Settled on Debian (no-non free), have reservations about systemd not being "the unix way" but I manage it. I had settled on XFCE but recently I went back to the window manager I fell in love with while trying distros, Window Maker. My WM is there to manage my browser and terminal windows ;)
    I used to dual boot windows often. Since kdenlive was able to replace Sony Vegas for me I have booted win 10 once every 6 months to install updates or play a game on steam.

    • @soooslaaal8204
      @soooslaaal8204 Год назад

      What keeps me on windows is NETcore development in Visual Studio

  • @joschafinger126
    @joschafinger126 4 года назад +4

    c. 5:00 : I did use to dual boot for years, and looking back I don't really think it was a waste of time. Rather, it was my gateway to becoming a full-time Linux user. That was back in the days of Ubuntu 9.04, and I wasn't really sure about making the switch yet. I didn't want to lose the games I was playing back then, nor bet everything on a horse I didn't yet know how to ride. By dual booting, Ubuntu allowed me to work with Linux and play on Windows. Plus, I could access the Windows partition from Ubuntu, which allowed me to erase a number of viruses that my antivirus could only locate.
    After a while, I only booted into Windows when I felt like playing The Sims or something -which I ultimately lost interest in. Then the "upgrade" to Win10 screwed up my dual boot setup, which finally made me get M$ and its products out of my system for good.
    I don't think I'd have taken the jump into Linux as easily as I did (perhaps not at all, as a daily driver) if it hadn't been for dual boot.
    I'm a teacher in Spain, and in many autonomous regions, such as mine (Extremadura, the #1 Linux pioneer here), state schools, the public health service, and many other public bodies use Linux. Yet most fellow teachers I know use Windows at home (doctors tend to use Mac), continuously complaining about how their texts translate badly between both systems, screwing up their layouts. Why is that? Well, they don't want to switch all the way (yet) and think that dual booting is hard to do. But having a well-running, dual booting machine at home could take away their fears and smooth over the initial adaptation shock.
    In my case, it was just a few weeks of dual booting before I started perceiving using Windows as a nuisance. And how many convinced Linux users and contributors started out in a similar way? I'd be very, very surprised if the proportion were small.

  • @anonl5877
    @anonl5877 2 года назад +3

    One of the things that drew me in to Linux was git. Installing it and having it work consistently on Windows is such a pain in the ass. It's amazing how such a basic program works completely differently on a different OS.

  • @leoliu2079
    @leoliu2079 4 года назад +3

    Gratz on 70k subscribers

  • @theguyyoucantstand6222
    @theguyyoucantstand6222 4 года назад +8

    For me it started with Linux Mint Cinnamon in 2016, I thought it was impressive, I love being able to customize things to the extreme. Kind of already had a little bit of exposure through that cheap Alienware Alpha i7 I got on sale for $350 through Steam OS, which I didn't like, so I changed the OS to Windows 10 and then downgraded to 7 because it's better and less frustrating, then dual booted it along with Antergos with KDE because I like how it looks.

  • @LivingLinux
    @LivingLinux 4 года назад +3

    It started with Knoppix for me. Amazing how you could take the CD or USB stick and boot most machines with it.

  • @TerenceKearns
    @TerenceKearns 3 года назад +1

    I first got Linux from a CD in the sleeve of a book I found at the uni co-op book store. It was slackware Linux and a book which introduced it back in 1995. Windows 95 had just come out. This was at a time when the state of the art internet connection was a 14.4kbps modem which I used to dial into the university's SLIRP server which was managed by the "computer club". Honestly, I feel like that's when computers were the most fun. I was happy to mess around with the command line.

  • @DoesThisMatter
    @DoesThisMatter 4 года назад +22

    Insert lawnmowing boomer meme.

  • @ImanoffGolf
    @ImanoffGolf 4 года назад +5

    I suppose Luke is currently preparing his departure to OpenBSD.

  • @spagootest2185
    @spagootest2185 4 года назад +5

    Windows Vista was about to be discontinued, so I installed Ubuntu 16.04 and never looked back.

  • @ricardo5622
    @ricardo5622 4 года назад +2

    In 2014 I started learning about Linux and the command line because I got sick of windows updating automatically etc. Started with Linux mint, went to ubuntu, then manjaro, then arch, then debian, then feeebsd and open bsd and now I am using mx Linux and popOS

  • @ltxr9973
    @ltxr9973 4 года назад +3

    Cool dad! You should try a Gentoo install too, just look at it as a digital ayahuasca ceremony.

  • @zodjenkins2595
    @zodjenkins2595 3 года назад +1

    most inspiring story on the internet thankyou Luke

  • @chaoticsoap
    @chaoticsoap 4 года назад +4

    Started with Ubuntu cause of college, tried Mint, tried Manjaro (hella liked it, but gave up on it after some bugs), went Arch and it's perfect, running on both of my computers.
    Left Windows to rot, not dual booting anymore.

  • @oORoOFLOo
    @oORoOFLOo 4 года назад +18

    I never used Linux and I dont particulary plan to, yet find his vids entertaining, am I austistic

  • @o_-_o
    @o_-_o 4 года назад +2

    As a exuser of Ubuntu I cannot deny it
    and I have still have some affection toward it
    (and I suggest it for beginners till this day)
    but MANJARO maaan changed everything LUV

    • @mrbrad4637
      @mrbrad4637 4 года назад

      Same here, started with Ubuntu, then moved to Manjaro i3 and havent looked back.. But I still have a soft spot for Ubuntu and recommend it too newbies

  • @deltaray3
    @deltaray3 3 года назад +6

    How did you first get into Linux?
    Well it's funny, a long time ago I was walking up this very road in the middle of nowhere a and I found thrown in the grass an Ubuntu Live CD and said what's this?

  • @user-bg9xo2xv6v
    @user-bg9xo2xv6v 4 года назад +2

    As an 18 year Gentoo user, and a 22 year Linux user... nothing compares. Even BSD feels limited in comparison to Linux.

  • @u3u36
    @u3u36 4 года назад +8

    I got to Linux because I started CS, that's it.

    • @connorazzarello5514
      @connorazzarello5514 3 года назад +1

      Its amazing how few of my current undergrad classmates actually use Linux. I definitely agree with your point though, my intro programming lab forced us to use Vi and it made so much sense.

  • @razorgarf
    @razorgarf 4 года назад +2

    I'm on Windows 10 and Elementary OS dual boot, I love both systems and have zero problems with dual boot. Windows 10 is great and that's coming from someone who has used windows since Windows 3.11.

  • @hmagellanlinux307
    @hmagellanlinux307 4 года назад +1

    Great Uncle TED Talk, Luke

  • @NuryPPanaligan
    @NuryPPanaligan 4 года назад +8

    The only reason I use Windows are CAD softwares (AutoCAD, Revit and the likes)
    99% of the time. I use Linux.

  • @nekoill
    @nekoill 3 года назад +1

    Indeed, Vim is a gateway to Linux. I used to use WSL on Win10 just to essentially use Vim, and then I realized that wait a minute, why do I boot into the graphical environment just to run a terminal to use a terminal application? Next thing I remember - me thinking "Manjaro is sure nice, but there's just too much stuff, I guess it'll be easier to install something that doesn't have that much stuff to uninstall", and bada bing bada boom, I'm using Arch.

  • @TheAnimateor
    @TheAnimateor 4 года назад +5

    5:34 ... and this was back in the gnood old days

  • @Gornius
    @Gornius 4 года назад +10

    13:20 - For me it was.
    Oh, this dude has in his bio: "I proudly run Arch (btw)".
    A few days later another dude's bio: "I use Arch btw".
    Basically I started using Arch thanks to meme.

  • @micahgmiranda
    @micahgmiranda 4 года назад +6

    I thought Windows 98 was way more customizeable than 95. I remember it had themes with crazy 90's fonts.

    • @MrFillzor
      @MrFillzor 3 года назад +2

      Screwing around with all those Windows 98 themes was 70% of my motivation to use computers back then
      The other 30% were, of course, playing Genesis ROMs and Flash games

  • @stephenreaves3205
    @stephenreaves3205 4 года назад +2

    I wonder if Luke vlogs long enough, will he walk around the globe and end up back home

  • @andriyusyk1861
    @andriyusyk1861 4 года назад +2

    Alright you convinced me to use arch.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 4 года назад +2

      I ran Arch once. I'll never get that 15 minutes back ever either.

  • @Rhomagus
    @Rhomagus 4 года назад +1

    Started playing around with modded Skyrim. Started using the Steam controller. Liked making different configurations and fell in love with the intracacies involved of being able to tinker, operate, and enhance the things you already bought. I was becoming frustrated with having to make all these workarounds in an operating system that I bought and paid for just to make it work how I want it to work then to only be restricted from tampering with it to the degree that I need. I don't like the idea of updates being forced on me as there have been more than once where an update broke up my everday tasks. I then figured if I'm going to go through this much trouble modding Windows, I might as well just start from the ground up so I started with Arch. It was a bit frustrating at first but now that I have it up and running everything has been pretty smooth from there.
    I was also really impressed with seeing what some people had done with their desktops on Linux and all the different "flavors" of OS and DEs available to Linux users. Linux has made computing fun to me, rather than just using my computer as a glorified game console / web browser. Also I really like editing videos, recording gameplay, and editing images and am interested in 3D modeling. I was looking for Adobe alternatives since I was using Premiere and Photoshop a lot and came across Davinci Resolve and GIMP. The cool thing was that not only were they free, but they were also available on Linux. Then I saw a video of a guy who tested Blender 2.8 on both Windows and Linux and the Linux version in a lot of cases was literally twice as fast so that's when I decided to take the dive. Windows isn't really offering me it's value for my particular use case in comparison to the free alternatives that are out there.
    I'm still not using Linux full time. I just started using it for the first time about 4 days ago. I have a whole drive dedicated to Arch and another drive dedicated to Windows, but I haven't booted into Windows for those 4 days, so we'll see.

  • @Griimnak
    @Griimnak 4 года назад +1

    The only key differences in linux distributions are package managers and how updates are delivered. (bleeding edge or stable)

    • @homelessrobot
      @homelessrobot 4 года назад +1

      not really. this is just the most obvious difference from the surface level. What is generally more important for how the whole system functions is the init system and the service management interface. For some distro's what sets them apart is a special kernel configuration, or configuration management strategy.

  • @3xclu5iveOfficial
    @3xclu5iveOfficial 4 года назад +17

    Boomer rants about why Windows 95 is the best

  • @fubaralakbar6800
    @fubaralakbar6800 4 года назад +1

    My first contact with Linux was in the late 90s-early 2000s, via Red Hat 5.1. The machine in question was an old clunker with no mouse, so I had to go command line only. To me it looked like DOS but behaved like something aboard a UFO. There was even a neat text adventure. Obviously I stuck with Windows as my daily driver, but the Linux box was nice for hobby tinkering.
    When Windows started fingerprinting people's hardware during the XP years, I got fed up and started looking for a way out. So I asked a guy at my church about Linux, and he got me a copy of Fedora 9. That was my first "real" Linux experience, and I fell completely in love. This time the machine I was running it on had a mouse, but no internet connection...so installing stuff was REALLY fun, if you know what I mean (does anyone have a noose handy?)
    Not long after that, a school mate hooked me up with a wireless router, and I discovered the software center (or whatever Fedora was calling it at the time) and never looked back.
    Linux is not an easy journey--freedom never is. But it is worth it. Take the plunge, friends. Don't look back. You will not regret it.

  • @redgeoblaze3752
    @redgeoblaze3752 3 года назад +1

    My C++ professor made us ssh into the school's Linux server to do and submit projects.
    From there, my interest in Linux was piqued when I heard about the security, and privacy. Also, everyone said that it was better for programmers, so I took a Linux fundamentals class to count toward my degree. We used Ubuntu, and mostly learned some basic commands, and some surface level bash scripting. Honestly, it was pretty fun, and I've only felt the need to go back to Windows when I got sick of trying to troubleshoot games.

  • @Zack-mp6ys
    @Zack-mp6ys 3 года назад

    I love tiling windows, that 's why I use Pop OS as my laptop system. And Pop OS taught me that minimize and maximize window buttons are obsolete. You have tiling window manager, and there is no need to minimize and maximize your windows. I use Manjaro for a while, but I am not a powerful user yet, and I could not shoot all the troubles yet. Thanks, Luke. I installed Manjaro on my spare computer X220 again.

  • @uuu12343
    @uuu12343 3 года назад +6

    Someone snuck behind me in school when i didn’t notice him, he then proceed to Whisper “I use arch btw”.
    A blinding light exploded and i found myself on the computer, sitting in front of a screen with “Grub rescue”
    Welcome to my story

    • @kashmirwillwin3124
      @kashmirwillwin3124 3 года назад

      That guy was the human manifestation of github and he saw in you The One

  • @KipIngram
    @KipIngram 3 месяца назад

    I left the small company I'd worked for and started a consulting practice. This was 2002. I do embedded system development, and I needed to be able to lay out printed circuit boards. I couldn't afford $40,000 for fancy Mentor Graphics etc. software. So I put together a Linux box and ran the gEDA package - for FREE. It got the job done just fine. Linux definitely had some rough edges back then. Stability issues, etc.

  • @bubbles581
    @bubbles581 3 месяца назад

    In 1995 a local ISP owner got me into it. Slackware. Couldnt get X to work but used it anway lol. Man those were the days!
    Gosh i spent soooooo many hours playing civ 2

  • @horseblinderson4747
    @horseblinderson4747 3 года назад +1

    Got sick of running win recovery or having to buy a new license.
    I also got older and wiser and learned to just say f'it that's good enough.

  • @dandzislav
    @dandzislav 4 года назад +5

    there is almost no difference in distros unless you try NixOS

    • @thisrocks
      @thisrocks 4 года назад

      Except upgrading Fedora every few months. That's what got me to switch to Arch, rolling releases are a dream.

  • @jayrock4ya
    @jayrock4ya 4 года назад +1

    Windows 2000 professional was my favorite of all time. I got so far with customs and comy goodness with it!!! Nothing is better so far 🤔🤔

  • @catchnkill
    @catchnkill 2 года назад

    My first Linux experience was when I brought a Linux book with a CD-ROM bundled in a local book shop. The CD-ROM is a Linux distro. It is Red Flag Linux, a Red Hat Linux with Chinese language accomodation. Years later I am a Fedora guy.

  • @lpoki8897
    @lpoki8897 4 года назад +3

    I use Windows and Linux and might migrate fully to Linux once I have a good enough grasp on it.
    The snag in that journey is ironically enough Ubuntu which is supposed to be the more user friendly Linux.
    But for a programming newb like me it's a pain to compile anything, and the PPA system can be a bit of a pain.
    One evening I was watching George Hotz install Arch and I was like "fuck it, let me try".
    I followed the wiki for once (normally it's youtube or something) and it was like 'bim, bam, bosh' and I was done.
    I got a window manager up and running not super good but I was blown away by how easy it was.
    And the AUR is like git, make, done and it seems like everything is ported to Arch.

  • @arthurhyatt5544
    @arthurhyatt5544 2 года назад

    My step father introduced me. He ran a linux server for Unreal tournament multi-player LAN back in the '90s.

  • @iceyrazor
    @iceyrazor Год назад

    me just lookin at the trees "are they in a grid??"

  • @-XArchLinuxEnjoyerX-
    @-XArchLinuxEnjoyerX- 4 года назад +1

    came to the comments to read about why people do/dont use whatever distro they use, or opinions about linux as a whole
    instead all i see for miles around is people shit posting. Ngl, i love it

  • @zigginzag584
    @zigginzag584 4 года назад +7

    unironically you should use templeOS

    • @okramra
      @okramra 3 года назад

      Ironically that was ironic

  • @ezequielortiz4188
    @ezequielortiz4188 4 года назад +1

    I started using ubuntu linux in 2007 by a friends suggestion, distrohopped a couple of years until 2014 when I settled up with Debian!

  • @chrkrngl
    @chrkrngl 4 года назад +1

    first linux was ubuntu 5.04 hoary hedgehog. there was an article in my local town boomer newspaper (kraut here btw) and it was about ubuntu and emphasized the shipit.ubuntu.com website. I already knew and used openoffice and thunderbird and firefox on a daily basis and the article said those programs were the core of ubuntu. so I was very interested if this free of cost shipit thing would really work. And it did. Came on 2 discs with nice packaging and a bunch of ubuntu stickers. the concept of a live-cd blew my mind. so I installed dual boot and made a "migration checklist". So I wanted to do browsing, e-mail, watching DVDs and play mp3s. It all took me a while to figure out but over time I had less and less reason using my Windows 2000 installation. And I wasn't much into vidya ga(y)ming back then. ironically Linux (and Gaben) is to blame that I'm now into gaming. Altogether I will never forget re-loading apt sources in Synaptic the first time with both "universe" (huuuge free software repo, not officially supported) and "multiverse" (contrib, mostly non-free stuff) repositories enabled. The sheer amount of software available blew my mind. I liked frozen-bubble, extreme tuxracer, Grip (cd ripper, back to life very recently), GXine, and Rhythmbox and all on Gnome2. It was a golden time.

  • @altEFG
    @altEFG 4 года назад +3

    He's been bitten by a radioactive minimalism

  • @cunawarit
    @cunawarit 3 года назад

    Listening to this makes me feel soooooooooo old. "Way before Ubuntu Unity", that feels like last week to me!!!

  • @thescrawl6594
    @thescrawl6594 4 года назад

    I cant even imagine writing something as long as a thesis in Word. Especially with all the references. God that sounds like fucking hell.

  • @davidtatikashvili3958
    @davidtatikashvili3958 4 года назад +8

    So like Smith is really got back from hood wood

  • @MrG0CE
    @MrG0CE 3 года назад +4

    "WHAT U SEE IS WHAT U GET EDITOR" JAJAJAJA I LOVE LATEX BTW !

  • @timothyvandyke9511
    @timothyvandyke9511 4 года назад +1

    It is definitely not 8 o clock on Saturday morning 😉

  • @galbi4235
    @galbi4235 4 года назад +1

    video games are art

  • @humanrays
    @humanrays 3 года назад +1

    Now I want to know what text editor Luke's dad likes...

  • @RandomActivities
    @RandomActivities 2 года назад +1

    Gaming on Linux is a lot better than it used to be.

  • @homelessrobot
    @homelessrobot 4 года назад +1

    floating/stacking window managers make sense because they do not assume very much about how much screen real estate the user has or how much they know or care about the window management philosophy. Modern tiling window managers throw you into a world where every time you open a new window you are chopping away at screen real estate, and you are forced to start thinking about the concept of UI layout.
    I prefer tiling for certain workflows, but (usually) I just don't want to care about the window manager at all. I don't want opening a new browser window requiring me to start caring about how important/relevant other windows are. I usually use a stacking/floating manager to manage my display at the top level, and if I want tiling, I start an instance of xephyr and let a tiling window manager control that.
    Yes, most tiling window managers have a floating mode, or a floating layer, but that also seems to be missing the point.

  • @W33PING-VIK1NG
    @W33PING-VIK1NG Год назад +1

    I've used Linux as my main Operating System since I'd first ever used a computer. My dad had used it since long before I was born, so after I had taught myself to somewhat program on his computer, I had gotten my first ever laptop when I was about 7, and immediately the first thing installed onto it was Mint, on that laptop I had taught myself to program and configure or rice my systems to my liking. I've since distrohopped from Mint to Debian to Fedora to Arch. I still currently use and love arch, and am in my teenage yrs (not gonna specify as to not doxx my info out to google). I've always been heavily privacy conscious and done all I could to stay away from massive, stupidly greedily money-hungry, American, soulless digital "big tech" corporations.

  • @RobertJMorris
    @RobertJMorris 4 года назад +1

    I wrote my first BASIC program on a Commodore PET computer at the age of six. It was a series of print statements, but fuck.. I was 6!

  • @franny231123DMT
    @franny231123DMT 4 года назад +2

    { cues a 'The Dead South' track }

  • @Vlad-1986
    @Vlad-1986 4 года назад +1

    I went a bit the other way around: DOS/Win 3.1 was my thing because of videogames. Win95 was awesome, then Win98, where I was contempt.... and then came Win XP. Suddenly all my DOS games wouldn't work!
    So I heard about Dosemu (this was 2005, before DosBOX was useable at decent speeds). I dualbooted with Linux to play DOS Games. Up to when WINE was able to run Fallout 1 and 2.
    Then I just never looked back.
    Funny thing is that I usually keep XFCE4 for wen I share my computer with people who doesn't know about Unix. I use the chicago95 theme to make it look like Win95. I actually thing it is an awesome graphical interface even today.

  • @luludu4770
    @luludu4770 Год назад

    I got into Linux because I had too many Windows Problems. Then a friend had gotten me into Arch Linux, when I looked into other Distros than Ubuntu to actually learn how to use Linux Shell and how Linux works

  • @yuk_simhyeon
    @yuk_simhyeon 4 года назад +5

    I personally prefer a tiling manager for simplicity but no option for me since I need to use android studio and android emulator which are not managed very well by tiling managers.

    • @devhypercoder2522
      @devhypercoder2522 3 года назад

      I'm uding android studio on DWM. Doesn't make a lot of issues. The only issue is when I create a new project. But that isn't something we do a lot of time. Everything else is just perfect

  • @bikutoso
    @bikutoso 3 года назад

    I started with trying to understand FreeBSD. Used Ubuntu for a week after breaking my school laptop. Then used i Xubuntu, Debian, Gentoo, Manjaro (a "temporary" replacement to my desktop after some GPU issues with Gentoo), then i fell in love with OpenBSD (which i still love). And have settled on Void Linux for my laptop and my desktop when i get around to changing it.

  • @MrZombieSwamp
    @MrZombieSwamp 4 года назад

    I first met your channel because of LaTeX. I'm not even a linux heavy user but in a couple of years I'm planning on fully leaving Windows.