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  • Off-topic, your hair looks like it’s charged by your touching the coffee cup.

    • Need the coffee to figure out my dependency tree after decades of manually installing things... ☕ (I kid, of course. That's what the meth is for...)

  • I never want to touch a Slackware box, but I respect the hell out of it, and I'm glad it exists

  • My first distro was a slackwear 1.x boot root floppy pair. To play around with on our brand new 60* megahertz Pentium system we got Christmas 93.

  • I expected the mug to have slack on it as well :)

    But yeah, it's been quite a ride. I mean Linux in general has evolved so much over the years. My first test of Linux was from some floppy disk supplied by a magazine when I was a kid. These days I only use Linux since about 10 years back or so.

    It's literally the only way to get away from big tech today.

  • Yeah I installed 1.0 from floppy disks. I was really glad to get it on CD-ROM a bit later. I probably still have those floppies around here somewhere... I wonder if they still boot? Still have my old 486 around here somewhere too, come to think of it, but I needed a custom kernel to support my SCSI card and I'm definitely not going through that pain again. (Yes I had to boot off floppy drives in order to build a kernel image to be able to install it on my hard drive.)

    Probably time to get rid of it.

  • sigh yes I remember 1.0 taking up a lot of my 160mb hard disk.

    Things I remember: changing the command line font was mindblowing. I managed to get xeyes to run, but not a window manager, so I just had massive eyes following the cursor around. I compiled a lot of my really shoddy C code but had no idea what I was doing. The number of disks that Emacs needed felt disproportionate at 5 when MS Word 2.0 fitted on 3, and Doom fitted on 3 and a half.

    It was all very exciting, and felt like you were "sticking it to the man" by not using ms-dos :-)

    These days I just use computers as a tool, and as such I have Linux Mint on my home machine.

  • Now post one without the shirt to be distro-agnostic.

    • To celebrate Slackware turning 30, I took off my shirt. My girlfriend and six people on the internet were super impressed by my slackware tattoo.

26 comments