Yes, im doing le funy Meme. And yes, I am an autist, with some signs towards something adhd adjacent

I first tried Linux Mint when I was 12, eventually changed to Ubuntu when I was 13 or 14 because I saw the Windows 11 copilot button, installed arch at late 14, and got to gentoo when I was 15.

Can anyone beat me to it?

    • Papamousse
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      1324 days ago

      Yes, at least seeing a 50yo guy like me. We come from the 8bit world, there was no linux!

      • @[email protected]
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        623 days ago

        Been there! It was Avery different time.

        The first program I wrote was in the Logo Turtle Game on an Apple Iie in 4th grade. Did some BASIC programming on the Apple IIe’s building interpreter too.

        I use Arduino boards with Atmega, Esp32/8266, and M0 chips on them for embedded projects. These $8 boards have more processing capability then my first desktop computer…

        • I know it’s just nostalgia, but I sometimes really miss the days when you could memorize the entire memory layout of your computer. You knew that if you poked a value into a memory location, some pixels would flip at a certain place on the screen.

          It was nice living in such a small, constrained world.

          • @[email protected]
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            323 days ago

            I still live it. I use some Atmega chips like the attiny85. It only has 256 bytes if RAM and 5 i/o pins to work with. I code in C++ so I have 100% control over memory if I want it.

            Someday I’ll find a reason to work with attiny10 chips… There’s almost no resources on it and it’s about the size of a grain of rice!

            https://www.microchip.com/en-us/product/attiny10

            • Man, you make me wish I’d have followed an embedded career. When I first entered the market, embedded was niche and the domain of specialty industries like the MIC. If you cut out companies like Lockheed, building stuff to kill people, the job pool was really small. But there was a window, juuust around the time I moved to management, when you could find embedded jobs. I wish now I’d have taken that fork in the path.

              • @[email protected]
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                422 days ago

                I just finished teaching an Internet of Things class this term. I went strong on the ‘things’ bit of the title. We did all kinds of hardware projects, along with web apis, mqtt, and a tiny bit of clouds services to move data.

                It was one of the most fun classes I’ve ever taught. That stuff is great!

  • buckykat [none/use name]
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    1824 days ago

    when I was 13 or 14 because I saw the Windows 11 copilot button

    chomsky-yes-honey That button was announced January 2024.

    I think the first Linux I installed was probably Ubuntu somewhere around 5.04-6.06, I would have been about 15 at the time.

    • LuffyOP
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      224 days ago

      That cant be true

      I remember dual booting Ubuntu, I was on a Win insider build, and the button must have appeared around 2023

      • buckykat [none/use name]
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        1024 days ago

        Oh, I thought you were talking about the physical keyboard button, apparently the software copilot button appeared around May 2023, about seven months earlier

  • @[email protected]
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    1623 days ago

    Here’s what I started with. The release of Windows 95 lured me away from Amiga, but as the Amiga was a very customisable environment, I had this for an escape plan :D

    In the Amiga days I was ridiculously lucky and bagged a Silicon Graphics Indy system for pennies, so Unix was no stranger at this point.

    • Shimitar
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      423 days ago

      Cool, no, not my version but very close to it…

  • @[email protected]
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    1423 days ago

    Just to put you all on notice: I started my kids on Linux from day 1 of their computing lives. I’m playing the long game here. In another 80 years they’re going to be in the longest living users category.

    They mostly use Linux as their daily drivers. Any time they have to use windows for school work they also rage at the terrible UI and lack of ease of use. <Insert evil laughter here>

  • @[email protected]
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    1123 days ago

    in 2002 when my windows me computer start looping on the blue screen of death, with all of my college papers/essays/tests/assignments trapped in it.

    the recovery media refused to work because i had upgraded the computer several times and i couldn’t afford the $180 windows xp cd. so i bought a linux magazine for $5 that included a copy of mandrake linux installation media and used paper printouts from my college’s computer labs to help me rescue my work from the computer.

    • Simon 𐕣he 🪨 Johnson
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      22 days ago

      lol. This is my story as well, except I wrecked my XP MBR and the CD was in Dr. Dobbs that my dad had a sub thru his work from. I was too impatient to wait for him to bring home an XP install CD.

      • @[email protected]
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        322 days ago

        I suspect that this is the story for most Linux users; windows failing at a critical need

  • @[email protected]
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    1024 days ago

    I first dipped my toes in when I was probably around 14, messed with Ubuntu and damn small Linux but that was about it. I stuck with Mac as I didn’t enjoy windows and needed something “mainstream” back then. It wasn’t until apple made hackintosh’s somewhat obsolete and Microsoft started cramming AI into windows that I made the switch. I now run NixOS on my gaming rig and personal laptop

  • @[email protected]
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    24 days ago

    Debian and Mandrake in the late 1990s. And I was already almost three times as old as you were when you started. These days I’m happy with OpenSUSE Tumbleweed for daily use. I tried NixOS but it threatened to break my old brain.

  • @[email protected]
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    824 days ago

    I first experimented with Linux in 1999, but didn’t stay with it for long as I never got X11 working. I started using it more seriously in 2001 / 2002 and by the time Windows XP was established, I was a full time Linux user. I was a lot older than you though being in my mid-thirties.

  • oshu
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    724 days ago

    I started using linux Slackware in 1996. First time I was paid to install linux on a server in 1998. It was Red Hat 5.2 way before they switch to Enterprise Linux.

    Been my desktop daily driver since 1999.

    Yes, I’m old.

  • @[email protected]
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    624 days ago

    My first laptop was an Ubuntu machine with no battery when I was 4. I had no idea what Linux was, I just played the games my uncle had pre-loaded onto it.

  • tenchiken
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    623 days ago

    Slackware. 1993.

    I’m old lol.

    Been through:

    Slackware

    Mandrake

    Debian

    Ubuntu

    Redhat , old and new

    Fedora

    Arch

    Knoppix

    Pop!

    CentOS

    Enlightenment

    Etc etc…

    Right now I’m living on KDE Neon.

  • @[email protected]
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    624 days ago

    In 2006 my university used Ubuntu, I thought ‘Wow, this is different!’ Tried it out on my own computer but I was a heavy gamer so windows was the best option (hey, Win7 pretty alright anyway!)

    Fast forward to about 2022, I try it again but it’s not getting incorporated well with my program usage in school (as a teacher).

    Fast forward to 2024, worked out that Tencent software is on AUR (teacher in Mainland China) and I figure I’m doing another dive. So far, so good. Little itty bitty glitches especially with Libreoffice but I’m getting by without touching Win10.