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Here we go, that's an ubuntu installation screen...

How to switch from NetworkManager to systemd-networkd on Linux

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

Background image for Foresight Linux.

Made in Gimp.

Linux Kernel Internal Training by NECTEC & IBM @SIIT

Created using Photoshop CS4

Even school students are interested to know about Linux

My pi, installed, updated and ready to go.

I had to write a post about this app because it is friggin' amazing!

Me presenting in our first linux workshop

Photo : Jiel Beaumadier, 2010

How to access Feedly RSS feed from the command line on Linux

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

Escritorio:

GNU/Linux Ubuntu Karmic Koala 9.10

 

Panel transparente, awn.

 

Tema: clearlooks.

Bordes de ventana: Shikidust.

Iconos: Oxygen.

Barras de desplazamiento: Murrine (modificado con Gnome Color Choser)

 

Applets: windowbuttons (modificado a mano con GIMP para que no desentone en el panel) (tambiĂ©n el icono de amarok estĂ¡ modificado asĂ­ para que no desentone). Window title tambiĂ©n.

Lo utilizo en combinaciĂ³n de maximus, del que no aparecen los efectos en esta captura.

El panel estĂ¡ transparentado.

Fuente de los tĂ­tulos de ventana: Steve Bold Italic

Fondo de pantalla: Detroit dans le Bleu de Bobby Alcott

Vendredi dernier s'est est allé ce monsieur qui m'a installé il y a 12 ans maintenant mon premier Linux. Foutue maladie .... Bon vent Patrick.

Someone with a Linux Jesus fish on their car outside the Computer Science building in Clemson

organized by Ubuntu-MM, 48Hour Non-Stop Linux BootCamp at Yangon

How to turn Vim into a full-fledged IDE

 

If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com

A splash screen that Linux enthusiasts can use in combination with the GRUB2 boot-loader as a background for the boot menu. You can use it without my permission - I'll put a GPL on it later. As a courtesy I would ask those who use it to add a comment to that effect.

Photos from day 2 of Linux.conf.au 2009

The Topic of my talk: A New Approach In The 21st Century For Digital Imaging Software.

 

This photo is licensed under a Creative Commons license. If you use this photo within the terms of the license or make special arrangements to use the photo, please list the photo credit as "Jon Fravel" and link the credit to www.flickr.com/photos/jfravel

Came across this t-shirt from the mid-90s. I've been using Linux for work since 1994.

Many people are confused about the concept of Linux 'distros' or distributions. They are confounded with the idea that there are actually 'choices' for an operating system. There are literally thousands of Linux distros in this world, including the little niche ones like the one I installed in my WiFi router yesterday.

So, I don't blame anyone since most people come from the post Microsoft era, where almost all the computing lies that they had grown up with stemmed from Redmond. This is a graph, that will either help clear things up, or make it even more confusing. It is a graph of various popular Linux distros since the Linux epoch 16 years ago.

Most people would have heard of RedHat and SuSE, which are two of the most successful commercial distros today. RedHat is arguably the most successful commercial Linux vendor, while SuSE is second and owned by Novell, which has been battling Redmond before getting into bed with them quite recently.

Debian is famous for being the most 'vanilla' distro out there. That's why you can see that there are a lot of other distros that have grown out of it and are still based on their Debian roots. The most famous of it's offspring is Ubuntu, which anyone who has been keeping up with the technology industry would know of. They're based on the Isle of Man, just off the English coast.

So, if I were to describe Linux as an ice cream, a distro would be all the different flavours available. Different people have different tastes and requirements. So, it's quite impossible to provide a single ice cream flavour to cater to them all. So, that's why there are so many flavours of Linux. Each flavour caters to a different market segment.

However, this is probably why Linux is quite daunting to most consumers. They don't know how to choose when presented with choice. Well, just like my gelato experience in Italy, the only way to know is to try it out. Pick any flavour, and try it. Some, you will immediately hate the moment you try it. Some, you will grow to dislike after having it for a few days. While one, you will fall in love with for the rest of your life.

Hopefully, this graph will help people select a distro. Pick one. However, don't pick one at random. Then, you will end up with random experiences. The best thing to do is to check out some reviews and ask a Linux user friend. I'm sure that you can find one. There are so many of us out there. If you don't like it, pick one that is from a different branch of the tree, so that you get to try something fairly different. Then, if you've narrowed down specific features that you like or dislike, pick one of it's cousins. And then, hopefully, you will fall in love.

I started with Slackware in 1996, had a disastrous fling with Debian and Mandrake, rebounded on RedHat for a year, before returning to the loving embrace of Slackware for life. I swear by Slackware, which is arguably the oldest surviving commercial distro around. There aren't many quite like it in this world, as evidenced from the graph.

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