Linux
A community for everything relating to the GNU/Linux operating system
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Original icon base courtesy of lewing@isc.tamu.edu and The GIMP
It's 1995!
Now that I'm older stress weighs on my shoulders
Heavy as boulders but I told ya
Uni, around 2019! Had a professor on the web team who encouraged all students to do the entire uni education on Linux.
All tools and course material was tailored to work on Linux. Hand-ins, exams and anything related either functioned or had custom solutions built by the teachers, student and professors on the web programme.
Everything was open source and if we found any bugs we could just open issues on GitHub. Weekly hand-ins were done on the student server on your own instance of the web server.
In almost every aspect i think that programme was so well tailored for learning real web dev work.
After I switched to Linux Mint because Windows 7 got EOL a friend showed me Manjaro. I used it for a while and it was a pain in the ass. This was the moment I took a look at Arch Linux and after my first successful install I went full Linux nerd. This is roughly 5 years ago and now I even work in IT despite having studied social science.
When I "solved" teering on nvidia by installing i3 and started using only terminal, because any gui program was still freezing.
offtop
By the way, (unofficial) manjaro i3/sway were really good, inspite of populistic opinion about manjaro, especially in comparison with fedora i3 or endeavouros i3 (but still just arch/void is better, when you get used to terminal, than arch-based distros).
When I saw Windows 11.
I've been dual booting Win10 and Linux, with Win10 as default because gaming.
Upgraded to Win11, that made me immediately switch the default boot to Linux, and repurpose D: as /mnt/data.
Haven't booted into Windows since.
I do have Windows as a Docker image for using my printer, though.
Me too. Preemptive response to the rumors.
Ubuntu 7.10 so late 2007, but I guess the nerd part came when I installed Arch in 2011. Still running that very same install.
My interests changed which allowed a Linux distro to become a viable choice.
I unfortunately lost the friend group over time that played games online in my 30's for all the typical mundane life reasons. Even then I was playing co-op almost always with them. I'm a lover, not a fighter. But the odd game here and there that had anti cheat in co-op prevented me from switching.
Online became hostile to art hobbyists not trying to make a living doing it chasing the algorithms. So, my YouTube channel died falling out of search results or algorithm entirely. The road block of limited creative software on Linux is gone for me since I'm not using any of that software anymore. I've gone entirely analog to express my creativity instead. Although I'm also aware this situation has been improving pretty quick so it'll probably be irrelevant soon if it's not already for some.
Almost everything else you and I could list just works fine, so I need not list it all.
I'm a bit annoyed about HDR support being slow as balls to develop by any DE so far, not that Windows implemented it well yet either. I also have unresolved issues with KDE dropping signal on televisions or video receivers...and Nvidia is still just plainly a shit experience. I had to use GNOME in the living room. Which works well anyways for a couch user. To use Linux without wanting to stab myself I just gave up and bought Radeon cards over time after wasting too many hours fighting bugs caused by Nvidia.
I'm of the opinion that to fully embrace Linux that must also mean being willing to spend money replacing (auxillary too) hardware that only works on Windows instead of trying to make it work on Linux to limited success or none at all.
I stopped dual booting in 2023 for a more specific date. I have two computers. Desktop and...HTPC maybe not accurate. It's used as a desktop too, but with a focus on bigscreen UI elements or modes. I use it for everything, not just Stremio. Both had Nvidia cards, took awhile to justify replacing both and I didn't want to be wasteful upgrading early. I managed to side-grade without losing any money thanks eBay Nvidia used card thirst this year. Nice.
Every few years since the mid 2000s I've dual booted Linux (often Ubuntu) briefly before removing it again and just using windows and then I stopped for many years. I've gradually become less happy with windows, increasing ads and tracking but then the announcement of recall made it clear I had to switch. I was going to wait but then windows 24H2 update broke my Bluetooth audio so that was the last straw.
I installed endeavourOS on a separate drive and really liked it. GNOME at first. Then I installed nixOS and for me was almost perfect but I couldn't get a few things to work like PIAs GUI app and doing some software development was more awkward than I liked.
Now I'm back on endeavourOS but with KDE plasma and it's great.
I love endeavour os & KDE plasma.
It just works, haven't had any issues
Around 2024,late 2024-early 2025 is where I fully ditched windows
I think I was still occasionally using Mac OS in early 1999, but I made the leap sometime that year.
I originally used linux because I could only get my hands on ancient or broken tech.
Then I switched to Windows again because I was able to buy a modern laptop and started university which more or less required Microsoft services.
Two years ago I started using Linux on my dual booted machines more frequently. Last year I realized I mostly didn’t need Windows so I decided to find a daily driver distro.
I forgot how easy it is to get caught up in distro hopping lol. I started with Debian because I remembered apps with Linux support typically only provide .deb packages.
Then the new KDE came out and I couldn’t wait to use it so I moved to fedora. Then, in looking into visual aesthetics, I decided I wanted to give hyprland a try and honestly just try Arch and make everything my own.
That was a mistake. Too many options to the point I was only using my computer for messing with the visuals.
I moved to fedora because it would just work, used it for a semester, and then moved back to arch (w/ xfce) and have been using it ever since.
I’d say around the switch from Arch to Fedora was when I became a Linux nerd because I realized that there isn’t really a best distro for every circumstance. My nerdiness has reached enlightenment lol
Super long time ago. Mandrake anything? How about Slack? Ha ha good times. Probably 20 years ago. I loved freedom Linux offered. Back then graphics divers sucked bad. Just getting opengl working was an accomplished. I can remember thinking "I'm going to just run Linux". It was rough, then I discovered Slack, then I discovered Debian, then I discovered Ubuntu, then Debian, then Arch.
These days I dual boot usually with two disks. 97% of the time I use Linux, but if something dumb comes up I'll bring up Windows.
When I got frustrated with Windows around 2019 and I had spare time I decided that enough is enough and spent a couple of days to take the time to learn Arch Linux and all of its quirks.
Around 2020 I started tinkering with NixOS as well which culminated as my NixOS configuration.
Although at this point I'm going back to Arch Linux as I actually know how to fix and make modifications faster and better than I could on NixOS.
I got my start with linux as a student looking to do astronomy. I didn't have any issues with windows that got me to switch; just liked it more for its own sake. I think I went full nerd when I realized how to compile my own stuff and set environment variables. I also really liked having a package manager.
I started using linux in 2011, but went full linux nerd in 2014/2015, while still in high school. Changed distros, changed OSs, changed everything, but full time it was linux all along, from ubuntu, to elementary os, to arch, to hackintosh, to solus, to endeavouros, to a lot of distros, but now i'm stable at cachyos (the optimized packages are amazing, ngl).
Summer of 2020. Lockdown was in full effect and I was working from home. I wouldn't say I had a lot of extra free time (my kid was 1 year old at the time, lol), but I spent many hours that Summer tinkering with various projects, and that led me to eventually adopt Linux as my daily driver on all my machines.
I've dabbled with Linux since 2005, but was never been savvy enough to completely ditch Windows until 2020.
1994
i don't deep dive into it enough to be a 'nerd', but i've been using some form or another since the early days of slack and debian.
When I bought my first PC in 1994.
At the time, the choice of hardware I could afford and operating systems that didn't suck was extremely limited, a PC with Linux was pretty much the only practical choice and I've stuck with that ever since.
Windows 7 had this annoying Windows Update notification, but my four-person household at the time collectively only had 10 GB of 16 Mbit/s and given my former experiments with Knoppix, I knew that the UI of Linux was more configurable and less authoritarian and I assumed that I could learn more easily within Linux how to save on data usage (including the update process). Some people also told me that there would be no viruses on Linux due to its relative obscurity back then.
When I built my own PC a little over a year ago. I only knew about Linux in the first place because I was trying (unsuccessfully) to make a media server out of an old laptop (I eventually figured it out)
Back when I was first in high school, I got into torrenting and gave myself pretty bad malware that just black-screened my laptop, and even though it had shipped with windows, the installer would not detect my ssd for whatever reason. Linux detected my hardware and I installed Ubuntu, then Mint, and I moved to Arch a few years ago after having learned the ropes. That's about when I fully spiralled into linux nerd.
even though it had shipped with windows, the installer would not detect my ssd for whatever reason.
bios probably defaulted to using a storage mode (like 'raid' or intel's rst) that requires 'f6' drivers loaded during windows setup. solution would have been to either find those drivers or switch bios to 'normal' ahci mode.
On and off over the last 15 years or so.
Only recently have I become much more comfortable & able to resolve things without resorting to search, stackoverflow etc.
The turnover point was the day I finally learned vi & cron so I could fiddle with an old Buffalo NAS, that was long out of support, riddled with security holes, and offered only very limited tooling.
Was a great learning experience, but it didn't pan out the way I wanted. So it runs Debian now, supports modern protocols, and continues to serve. Amazing what you can keep in service when you try.
I used Linux on and off since 2009?
But it was mostly just for work. I never really converted until proton came about. It made gaming viable on Linux and really provided a way to use Linux everyday.