I've just gotten my mail down, so sorry for the lateness of this :) A Short Linux History (by me)
In 1992/3 I was looking at getting myself a new operating system, well after chatting to a couple of friends, I heard about "debian linux", now I hadn't heard of linux before so when I found it was a free operating system, I was wrapt! Anyhow, I went out and bought the Infomagic CD-set (I didn't have internet access then), and well, lo and behold, there was a number of different distributions on the CD! Well, I recognised debian, so I attempted to install it *BAM* problems. First thing I created the install disks like the documentation suggested, and booted up, well, it installed the base system, then said something about not being able to find the debian cdrom. Well, here's the fun bit, it seems that due to the fact that I own (yep still own it) a cm205(MS) cdrom drive I would be unable to get the cdrom usable under linux (something to do with the driver code not being released for people to program a driver for it under linux)... hmm.. so I put the cd's on the shelf for a few years... 1997 I got myself an IDE cdrom drive (notice the delay, yep, I'm always broke!). So I dusted off the infomagic CDroms and tried installing debian again, well, infomagic hadn't provided all the BASE packages for debian, so I was pretty stuck here, I had a half-installed system... hmm... (couldn't even get on the internet). So I deleted and tried to install redhat, well it installed perfectly... I sense a kick-back here... so on a whim I tried slackware off the cd's... again they "forgot" to include all the packages for slackware... anyhow I ran redhat for a while, but got tired of it (not enough options, little availability of word proccessing software, etc..) so I left off on linux for a while.. January 1999 have net account will download! At the beginning of the year I'd gotten very bored with everything and decided to attempt to download and install debian off the net. This time things went great. To summarize the good points I have found with debian :- 1) Package list is very large, and so provides a large amount of options for its users. 2) Software is free. This is good for me who is broke. 3) dselect. Yep, I think dselect is very good. requires a little fine tuning to me (like search facility, faster loading of package lists, etc), but pretty decent job. 4) availability of support, I've been able to get almost all of my questions answered via this mailing list. Now, I have a few problems with it. 1) No "IDE" for the compiler. 2) Still no support for my old CDROM drive (I have a new computer/cdrom/etc. but I still have the old machine, and would like to use the old cd in the old system). 3) No documentation on how to load/use the original programs that loaded when installing. That is, can I load again the program that allowed me to setup the modules??? If so where is it? Those programs are very helpful for initial installation, but sometimes (as in my case) you might change your mind later on and want to use that program to go over something again. Basically of all the distributions of Linux, I prefer Debian over the others for installation and use, mainly because it is (to me anyway) easy to use, and decent installation of the packages. I aplaud the developers of Debian, but I really would like to see an "IDE" (Integrated Development Environment for those who don't know what I mean) for the compiler. I'd do what I could to fix any problems I had with installation, etc if I had one. I never liked (even under DOS) doing the code-compile-run-fix_code-compile-run cycle manually. Sure once I've gotten into the swing of how it works I'd be happy to ditch the "IDE" but until then, I guess I'll have to do all my coding under DOS/WIN98 (other partition)... This is Linux's main failing to me (all distributions, not just debian you'll notice). Regards, Peter Ludwig.