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-   -   Age of Slackers (https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/age-of-slackers-4175653164/)

cwizardone 05-09-2019 10:51 PM

Well, well, well...... as the ending credits of "WarGames" started to roll, a box popped up in the lower right hand corner saying "Triumph of the Nerds" was next and included (free) with a Prime account. I had just searched for it yesterday on Amazon and it was available for purchase, but was not "free." It is today.
If you have a Prime account it is worth watching.

It was a PBS special. The author/narrator doesn't say anything bad about anyone, he just shows you what happened, along with interviews with just about everyone in the business at the time and lets you draw your own conclusions.
The Woz and Jobs didn't invent the first PC and Jobs admitted he stole the idea for the MAC (from Xerox). Well, they did invent the first one that could be actually used for something useful. :)
Gates does not come off very well and I've heard rumors in the years since that he has tried to use his money to get it, "Triumph of the Nerds", edited so he doesn't look so bad. True or not, I don't know.
I have it on tape, but it is in storage, so I think, as the opportunity has presented itself, I'll watch it on Amazon and see if it has at all been changed.

I would love to see a sequel bring computer history current, but AFAIK, it hasn't been done.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triumph_of_the_Nerds

Cristiano Urban 05-10-2019 03:31 AM

I'm 31 years old.

I started using Slackware in the summer of 2008. At that time I was trying to configure the internal 56k modem of my laptop (a Toshiba Satellite M70-167). It worked fine with slmodemd + ALSA support and kppp. And... I still use Slackware! :cool:

SCerovec 05-10-2019 05:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cristiano Urban (Post 5993577)
I'm 31 years old.

I started using Slackware in the summer of 2008. At that time I was trying to configure the internal 56k modem of my laptop (a Toshiba Satellite M70-167). It worked fine with slmodemd + ALSA support and kppp. And... I still use Slackware! :cool:

slmodemd

memories

:sigh:

colorpurple21859 05-13-2019 06:14 PM

I'll be in a new bracket a couple of months from now, so decided to give the 61-70 category a boost.

astrogeek 05-13-2019 06:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by colorpurple21859 (Post 5994754)
I'll be in a new bracket a couple of months from now, so decided to give the 61-70 category a boost.

Getting kind of crowded in here! I'll be moving up a bracket in the not distant future, you can have my chair when the time comes!

igadoter 05-13-2019 07:17 PM

It is about experience not age - and willingness to do extremely boring things. I know this - I know that - but also I know - what is more important - there is no need to tell people that I know. Which actually says I am old.

frankbell 05-13-2019 09:22 PM

One of the things that keeps me interested in LQ is that there's always something to learn--well, there's always something to learn about Linux, and LQ is my avenue. Speaking as an old man (I never ever want to have "golden years" or be a "senior"--pah!), when I get tired of learning stuff, I'll be done.

I've recently decided to revisit chess, which I haven't played in years, not since I discovered contract bridge, with the help of a marvelous book by Edward Lasker.

SCerovec 05-14-2019 01:51 AM

I just re read the thread title and found the other meaning.

Is this the age of slackers, the golden age for those who use Slackware? For me it is - no reinstall for a long time, just works, minor security patches and all well in time if not better. Really few things that don't work on Linux nowdays...

We will remember the time of 14.2 (not over yet!) as the time served well in my experience.

astrogeek 05-14-2019 01:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SCerovec (Post 5994827)
I just re read the thread title and found the other meaning.

Is this the age of slackers, the golden age for those who use Slackware? For me it is - no reinstall for a long time, just works, minor security patches and all well in time if not better. Really few things that don't work on Linux nowdays...

We will remember the time of 14.2 (not over yet!) as the time served well in my experience.

Indeed it is The Age Of Slack[ers|ware]!

This is the second round of long-lived versions for me: I went from 12.1/2 directly to 14.1/2 on my personal machines, and it has been one long continuous smooth ride which is very far from over!

Labinnah 05-14-2019 03:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SCerovec (Post 5994827)
I just re read the thread title and found the other meaning.

Is this the age of slackers, the golden age for those who use Slackware? For me it is - no reinstall for a long time, just works, minor security patches and all well in time if not better.

At home I've same, only updated, system since 8.1. It survived couple mainboards, hard disks and 32->64 bit migration. It will have approx. 16 years old now.

It can be even older (7.1), but changing package naming scheme between 8.0 and 8.1 was too complicated and time consuming for me in those days :D.

coralfang 05-15-2019 05:49 PM

Voted for 21-30, as i turned 30 a few months back.

After getting used to Ubuntu and GNOME2, i personally first used Slackware when i was 19. Which was 11 years back. I would run it for a few days, break it, distro hop etc. Still finding my ground with Linux/Unix in general. Mostly hopping between Arch (prior to systemd), Debian, FreeBSD and even NetBSD.

IIRC, i made this forum account a few weeks after installing Slackware properly for full time use. Still have an i686 machine running the Slackware 13.1 release as a music/stream server.

My past ten years of desktop (and home server) usage has been 95% Slackware all that time. I would guess if LQ is still doing these kinds of polls in another 10 years time, i'd be edging into the 41-50 group...

ehartman 05-15-2019 10:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Labinnah (Post 5994839)
At home I've same, only updated, system since 8.1. It survived couple mainboards, hard disks and 32->64 bit migration. It will have approx. 16 years old now.

It can be even older (7.1), but changing package naming scheme between 8.0 and 8.1 was too complicated and time consuming for me in those days :D.

I did do some re-install's too since 7.1 on my year 2000 Pentium III

anon231 05-15-2019 11:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ehartman (Post 5995536)
I did do some re-install's too since 7.1 on my year 2000 Pentium III



My first slackware was 9.1. I have never updated a new version, but always just reinstalled. Fresh tastes always better. :shake:

kilaueabart 06-03-2019 03:25 PM

Wrong forum
 
I responded to the poll as an 84-year-old before my advanced Cognitive Impairment let me see that it was only for Slackware users. Ignore that "1."

Lysander666 06-03-2019 03:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kilaueabart (Post 6001726)
I responded to the poll as an 84-year-old before my advanced Cognitive Impairment let me see that it was only for Slackware users. Ignore that "1."

Your vote still counts, you're a future Slackware user.


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