Aww man blast from the past. I remember starting my Linux journey with Slackware back in 1999 and having to recompile kernel drivers for my soundcard and modem on a Pentium II.
Discovered Slackware in 1996, always had at least one machine running it here since. It just works as always and I'm a bit impressed with the newest KDE Plasma releases too. Good video intro for those less familiar with The Way of Slackware, agree with your defaults except I leave startup at runlevel 3 :)
Wow! Takes me back to the old RedHat 7 days... Running Bind and Send mail as a dialup ISP Used to recycle old 486s and pentiums as firewalls with ipchains. Love the in depth dives of your videos!
Nice video. The creation of user accounts is typically performed using the 'adduser' tool, which handles the group settings with the workflow ending in setting the user details and password.
I don't remember which version, but I started with Slackware in 2005. I do remember trying the slamd64 ports prior to the official release of Slackware64. I remember all the learning I got from the kernel compile times! Fun days! For the longest time, Slackware was my fallback to distribution. I would go and try the new distributions, but they were always "not Slackware!" and I became quite proficient at the installation process! :D Good trip down memory lane!
Slackware 3.3 was my first experience with Linux in the mid 90's. The kernel was 2.0.30 or thereabouts and it ran on a 386dx @ 33 mhz with 4 Mb of ram PC clone. I tried to install XFree86 but never got it to work so I had to settle with having to use Lynx to go "web surfing"
Slackware was the very first GNU/Linux distribution I ever used way back in 1997. I even met Patrick Volkerding at Comdex in 2000. That's when I told him I switched to FreeBSD (and never looked back). He was OK with it considering at the time he worked for Walnut Creek CDROM who also distributed FreeBSD CDROM's. I still have a Slackware branded screwdriver he gave me. LOL
Still using Slackware on my personal machines, due mainly to the fact that it causes far fewer "What the hell were they thinking?" moments than any other distribution I've tried. No systemd is another major attraction.
Slackware was the first distro I ever used, installed it on a 386dx machine with only 4mb or ram, 50mb HD and two floppy disks. You only needed one floppy disk IF you had at least 8mb of ram, but you could actually run the system in only 4mb (with only one floppy, you needed a 4mb ram disk to hold the system image while installing.)
I like that it works and feels like 15 years ago. Thats a good thing when I'm doing the same thing I was doing 15 years ago. And many scripts still work like 15 years ago. But I'm tired of library inconsistency in Linux. In that matter linux developer world work together like brainless ameba.
There is a solution already and just not very popular. Use flatpak for software installation. Dependency problem goes away. The catch is higher than usual disk space usage. However it is not that a matter now since it is common to start with 512GB SSD or even terabyte SSD for a new PC.
@@catchnkill Thanks for suggestion. However solving linux dependency mess problems with more resources is not problem elimination. What about virtualization? If I have a PC with many virtual machines my weekly full backups automatically will grow a lot.
@@technics6215 Flatpak is one of the solution. If you do not like this, there will be no solution to the dependency hell. If your software relies on libraries, you are asking a solution of zero bug software. This is not achievable.
My tongue was firmly in my cheek when I made this video. ;) I started my Linux journey with Slack back in the early-mid 90s - and I remember those days quite fondly and a surprising number of things with Slack haven't changed one iota since then. I first used Debian back in 1996 and it has evolved tremendously over the years. Thanks for watching and your comment!
@@stephenstechtalks5377 Oh yeah your right about that. It was awesome because where could you get a 32bit unix for less than $2000, well enter Linux. But I hoped by now they would have fix X windows.
Aww man blast from the past. I remember starting my Linux journey with Slackware back in 1999 and having to recompile kernel drivers for my soundcard and modem on a Pentium II.
Those were the days - thanks for sharing!
Discovered Slackware in 1996, always had at least one machine running it here since.
It just works as always and I'm a bit impressed with the newest KDE Plasma releases too.
Good video intro for those less familiar with The Way of Slackware, agree with your defaults except I leave startup at runlevel 3 :)
It sure is an evergreen, thanks for sharing!
Wow! Takes me back to the old RedHat 7 days... Running Bind and Send mail as a dialup ISP Used to recycle old 486s and pentiums as firewalls with ipchains. Love the in depth dives of your videos!
For sure! Thanks for watching!
Nice video. The creation of user accounts is typically performed using the 'adduser' tool, which handles the group settings with the workflow ending in setting the user details and password.
Indeed, thanks for sharing!
I don't remember which version, but I started with Slackware in 2005. I do remember trying the slamd64 ports prior to the official release of Slackware64. I remember all the learning I got from the kernel compile times! Fun days! For the longest time, Slackware was my fallback to distribution. I would go and try the new distributions, but they were always "not Slackware!" and I became quite proficient at the installation process! :D
Good trip down memory lane!
Good trip indeed, thanks for sharing! :)
Excellent video! Slackware was my very first experience for Linux following SCO Unix. It is really long time ago.
Indeed it is. Thanks for watching!
Slackware 3.3 was my first experience with Linux in the mid 90's. The kernel was 2.0.30 or thereabouts and it ran on a 386dx @ 33 mhz with 4 Mb of ram PC clone. I tried to install XFree86 but never got it to work so I had to settle with having to use Lynx to go "web surfing"
Thanks for sharing, good times indeed! :)
Slackware was the very first GNU/Linux distribution I ever used way back in 1997. I even met Patrick Volkerding at Comdex in 2000. That's when I told him I switched to FreeBSD (and never looked back). He was OK with it considering at the time he worked for Walnut Creek CDROM who also distributed FreeBSD CDROM's. I still have a Slackware branded screwdriver he gave me. LOL
Nice, thanks for sharing!
I had forgotten that Slackware looked SO much like Windows 3.0 installation screens!
Same era as Win 3.x ;)
Brilliantable Old School! Thank You!
So true! 🤣 Glad you liked it!
Still using Slackware on my personal machines, due mainly to the fact that it causes far fewer "What the hell were they thinking?" moments than any other distribution I've tried. No systemd is another major attraction.
Nice, thanks for sharing!
The Slackware homepage layout looks the same as I remember from the 1990s. Oh the days of floppy disk installations!
Why mess with success lol :)
Slackware was the first distro I ever used, installed it on a 386dx machine with only 4mb or ram, 50mb HD and two floppy disks. You only needed one floppy disk IF you had at least 8mb of ram, but you could actually run the system in only 4mb (with only one floppy, you needed a 4mb ram disk to hold the system image while installing.)
Ah, memories. Thanks for sharing!
I like that it works and feels like 15 years ago. Thats a good thing when I'm doing the same thing I was doing 15 years ago. And many scripts still work like 15 years ago.
But I'm tired of library inconsistency in Linux. In that matter linux developer world work together like brainless ameba.
Yes, an oldie like Slackware can come in handy for those edge cases. :) Thanks for commenting and watching!
There is a solution already and just not very popular. Use flatpak for software installation. Dependency problem goes away. The catch is higher than usual disk space usage. However it is not that a matter now since it is common to start with 512GB SSD or even terabyte SSD for a new PC.
Thanks for sharing!
@@catchnkill Thanks for suggestion. However solving linux dependency mess problems with more resources is not problem elimination. What about virtualization? If I have a PC with many virtual machines my weekly full backups automatically will grow a lot.
@@technics6215 Flatpak is one of the solution. If you do not like this, there will be no solution to the dependency hell. If your software relies on libraries, you are asking a solution of zero bug software. This is not achievable.
Just found your channel! Love it and keep it up! I’d appreciate any videos you’d do on BSD. :)
Awesome! Thank you! :)
Great video. Enjoying your content... and learning a fair bit too.
Great to hear, Antony!
The title and the content of this sound like Slack still lives in the 90s. I wonder why no-one talks about Debian like this.
My tongue was firmly in my cheek when I made this video. ;) I started my Linux journey with Slack back in the early-mid 90s - and I remember those days quite fondly and a surprising number of things with Slack haven't changed one iota since then. I first used Debian back in 1996 and it has evolved tremendously over the years. Thanks for watching and your comment!
2 questions: 1. does shutter screen capture software work on it? 2: can ncpmount be installed on it (to mount NFS)
Have not tested myself, but it's Linux so worst case these packages can be built if not already available. :)
Отличное видео, спасибо!
Пожалуйста!
thanks for the video!
Glad you liked it! :)
I remember those days with 17 to 24 slackware disks. Ha! Happy not to go back then.
True story! :) And it was a bad day when disk 17 of 24 started getting bad sectors... ;)
@@stephenstechtalks5377 Oh yeah your right about that. It was awesome because where could you get a 32bit unix for less than $2000, well enter Linux. But I hoped by now they would have fix X windows.
Wow very good video very knowledgable video thanks for make video
Glad you liked it!
Not so light. Bodhi Linux 6.0 runs with 180-250Mb RAM usage. (6% RAM usage on 4GB memory)
Enlightenment/Moksha is light indeed. Thanks for sharing!
You can get Enlightenment for Slackware.
Indeed you can!