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.

  • MTK@lemmy.world
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    14 minutes ago

    I mean, you could recreate it. Just burn some old distros on a cd and get one of tgese old white pc

  • lefaucet@slrpnk.net
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    30 minutes ago

    In the late 90s you could get CDROMs from the nerds at university with everything you need on them. If you got your sound card working and could play an mp3, you felt like a master hacker who had beat the game.

  • turnip@sh.itjust.works
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    4 hours ago

    I had an old laptop, and my WiFi required some kind of cutter driver that wrapped broadcom, my Intel graphics didn’t work on newer kernels. It booted in 7 seconds on a 5400rpm disk though while XP took over a minute.

    • hornedfiend@sopuli.xyz
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      3 hours ago

      Wifi? imagine trying to get pci modems working and basically compiling your kernel each time you’d need an obscure driver. usb didn’t even exist and external ones were both expensive af and running on serial ports.

      good times honestly. I learned so much about linux.

    • Geodad@lemm.ee
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      4 hours ago

      NDIS wrapper. I hated that so much, I bought a natively supported PCMCIA card.

  • easily3667@lemmus.org
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    6 hours ago

    It was real real rough

    Imagine gnome but instead of deciding your settings for you, they had a dialog where you had to pick the settings yourself.

    • DigitalDilemma@lemmy.ml
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      3 hours ago

      And you needed to find out the scanlines of your monitor before X would even display anything, and then that was a black and white grid. Then you needed to spent another day or two getting a window manager working.

      • easily3667@lemmus.org
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        4 hours ago

        There was but noone knew what to do with it. We were all universally confused for like a solid 25 years.

  • wewbull@feddit.uk
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    7 hours ago

    You spent a few evenings downloading a hundred or so 1.44MB floppy imges over a 56kbps modem. You then booted the installer off one of those floppies, selected what software you wanted installed and started feeding your machine the stack of floppies one by one.

    Once that was complete you needed to install the Linux boot loader “LiLo” to allow you the boot it (or your other OS) at power on.

    All of that would get you to the point where you had a text mode login prompt. To get anything more you needed to gather together a lot of detailed information about your hardware and start configuring software to tell it about it. For example, to get XFree86 running you needed to know

    • what graphics chip you had
    • how much memory it had
    • which clock generator it used
    • which RAMDAC was on the board
    • what video timings your monitor supported
    • the polarity of the sync signals for each graphics mode

    This level of detail was needed with every little thing

    • how many heads and cylinders do your hard drives have
    • which ports and irqs did your soundcard use
    • was it sound blaster compatible or some other protocol
    • what speeds did your modem support
    • does it need any special setup codes
    • what protocol did your ISP use over the phone line
    • what was the procedure to setup an tear down a network link over it

    The advent of PCI and USB made things a lot better. Now things were discoverable, and software could auto-configure itself a lot of the time because there were standard ways to ask for information about what was connected.

  • starbrite@lemmy.zip
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    7 hours ago

    On the topic, did AOL work on linux? They were the google of their time, i can’t imagine the FOSS world thought very highly of them

  • شاهد على إبادة@lemm.ee
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    8 hours ago

    The first time I ever used Linux was in high school around 2001-2002. I don’t remember what the distro was but it had drawing issues, clearly some kind of driver issue that I couldn’t figure out, on my PC so I switched back to Windows 98SE.

    Not what op asked for, but it kept away from Linux at home until 2007. I started using Linux regularly in university around 2004.

    • psion1369@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      I had the same issue with Red Hat 6.1 on a cheap PC. One of the reasons I love using Arch is it gives me the nostral of those days.

    • easily3667@lemmus.org
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      6 hours ago

      I don’t think this paints a bleak enough picture of Linux before 2010 or so tbh, but it’s a good start.

  • Tapionpoika@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago

    I didn’t have a Pentium processor in my computer, the internet was young, information wasn’t as ready or available, and the mindset wasn’t that you could check everything. I don’t remember how many floppy disks it took to install Slackware, but at least one read error was definitely on the way. I had a 56k modem at home, so I had printed out the installation instructions from work. Compiling everything wasn’t a problem, because I learned to code back in 1983. When I tried to figure out the refresh rate of my screen, I was afraid I would blow it up and go blind. The feeling of freedom was when you were the one who could choose everything for the first time in your virtual life.

  • megrania@discuss.tchncs.de
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    9 hours ago

    Hmm my first linux distro was Suse 5.x that came on 5 CDs (i think it was 1998) … can’t say I used it much, I had weird German ISDN Internet at the time and the PPPoverWhatever (forgot the exact name) just didn’t wanna work. Making music wasn’t really feasible at the time. It mostly lay dormant. I slowly climbed the learning curve and switched to Linux full-time in the mid-2000s, when a lot more things were possible …

  • ace_garp@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Games: xbill, koules, and quake1 prerelease test(8 or 16 player multi)

    Crafting XFree86 config lines to get a monitor working(no auto-detect for resolution modes)

    Sharing tips, on how to solve all these issues, with others at Linux User Groups(LUGs)

  • oldfart@lemm.ee
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    14 hours ago

    Contrary to other OSes, the information about it was mainly on the internet, no books or magazines. With only one computer at most homes, and no other internet-connected devices, that posed a problem when something didn’t work.

    It took me weeks to write a working X11 config on my computer, finding all the hsync/vsync values that worked by rebooting back and forth. And the result was very underwhelming, just a terminal in an immovable window. I think I figured out how to install a window manager but lost all patience before getting to a working DE. Days and days of fiddling and learning.

    • jownz@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Lol! 'Member Afterstep?

      The desktop stretched across 4 screens was enough to hook me for life.

      Xeyes… so many terminals… the artwork was artwork… wtf is transparency?! 😁 It was an amazing time to be a geek.

      • oldfart@lemm.ee
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        11 hours ago

        I didn’t get that far. And I only had an Amiga at that time, which made things more difficult to set up. I wonder how fluent transparency would be with AGA, haha. My next attempt was woth a PC around 2003 with KDE3 and it got me hooked.

  • quinkin@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I got tired of compiling the kernel taking a day on my Pentium pc. So I got a pile of 486s the uni was throwing out, built a Beowulf cluster out of them and soon I was able to compile the kernel in two and half days.

  • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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    14 hours ago

    The only OS that was solid as a desktop OS back then, with good usability, was BeOS. Both MacOS and Windows had stability problems (although NT/2000 were much better, but lacked app/game compatibility), and Linux was a nightmare to update and run (lots of compiling too). So the OS of choice back then for me, was BeOS. I could do everything I needed with it too.