Ubuntu 8.04 was how I discovered Linux. My mom was part of some online forum that shared links to free things you could sign up for, and this was one of them - same CD sleeve and everything! I recall wanting to badly to replace Windows XP on my laptop, but after some trial and error, it ran so poorly on my hardware that I reverted. Still have this tucked away on my shelf of software somwhere.
Ubuntu 8.04 was also how I discovered Linux. I borked my XP install by compressing NTLDR and didn’t have install media, but the library would loan out a Ubuntu 8.04 LTS book with accompanying install media, so my Dell Optiplex GX240 ran Ubuntu Hardy Heron for quite a while.
It was my second Linux... I'd been using Red Hat 8 and 9 until Ubuntu 8. Then I moved to it for an easier app install/update process. This vid really brings back memories.
@@arnorobinwerkman for me it was also 10.04, some guy did some workshop at a nearby elementary school computer lab and handed out CDs with 10.04 on them
He applied the thermal paste the right way, and also the wrong way. There's way too much and not nearly enough. So there, whatever way you fall on the issue, I got you covered (pun intended). #ThermalPasteOpinions
Oh my God, that startup sound instantly transported me back to the late 2000s 😂 I had SO MUCH fun with Ubuntu on a tiny Acer netbook back then. Messing up the system after tweaking it "a bit" too much launched a routine of bi-weekly re-installs of Ubuntu 👀
I remember when I tried Ubuntu for the first time. I was about 15 years old and I read about the system on the Internet, since I had a dial-up modem I couldn't download, so I tried to get the CD in physical format, I sent the request and after a few weeks I received the CD in a white padded bag . As a plastic bag, with some Ubuntu stickers to use. It was Ubuntu 6.0 Dapper Drake, and I remember very well that I went to my school to see if I could get "a real dial-up modem" because I have a WinModem that was like a simple board and almost 100% drivers for Windows. So I couldn't use it on Linux. I got a dedicated Motorola so I could finally use it. What times...
Man.. I am glad I found this channel. It's been a blast from the past and there's no magic cuts to where everything is magically working. I really appreciate having real videos that show the struggles of working with 20+ year old hardware. Keep on keepin on! You're awesome!
5:46 thats true for that socket 478 version, but in LGA775 versions, not only were 64bit P4's common, many were 3ghz and above, plus hyperthreaded. I have a 2ghz version of that 478 P4 in my Win98 machine on a Gigabyte board, but ive had no urge to overclock it (the board does allow for it).
I would love to see the TV Tuner situation on 8.10. I remember having a tuner card and recording shows on a schedule from Ubuntu Studio and running XBMC to watch them all and sync to my iPod video.
I would say all Ubuntu versions before unity have the best interface, UI design, and also system sounds. Also it was stable and also has the most authentic design in terms of wallpapers and theming.
You never really understand the value of something until it's gone. Why did they have to remove such amazing sounds from the current version of Ubuntu?
Socket 478 wasn't actually the last intel pga socket, that honour goes to socket G3, the last laptop socket (at least on the intel side). 478 was the last on the intel desktop though, unless someone used high end laptop parts in a desktop up to 2014.
You have no idea how much your videos help my mental health. I'm not in dire straits, but these shenanigans bring a lot of joy to Mondays, which are my most chaotic work days. So, thank you.
@@magickmarck Thank you! Indeed, I am extremely fortunate. I have a fantastic family and amazing therapists. But sometimes, days are mbeh and honestly, retro shenanigans bring a smile to my face. I thought he should know. Take care, yourself! Life is pretty nice :)
I actually ordered that same ubuntu dvd and was very pleasantly surprised when I received it in mail. I never believed they would ship to India back then
I have never used Linux in that era, only after 2015 or so. Interesting to see what the Ubuntu experience is like while watching this on Ubuntu 23.10 and you just introduced me to Sauerbraten, absolutely love it haha
Brings back fond memories! My first version of Ubuntu was 6.10, which I tried for a few days until 7.04 was released (which was a lot less buggy). Ubuntu 8.04 LTS would be the first version that I installed on some other people’s computers, most of them running Windows Vista originally. Seeing the colour scheme, hearing the login sound and seeing that classic GNOME 2 desktop in action really brings back good memories! On the other hand, I do remember how hard it was back in those days to do things like watch online video, or the availability of software. There have most definitely been great strides in making the Linux desktop Just Work, helped by the general move towards the web.
Hardy Heron was the release that got me to finally switch to Linux full time, after dipping my toe into 6.06 a couple of years earlier. My desktop still looks like the one I had back then, which to me, is the most important thing. The underlying OS has changed massively, but I have hardly noticed it. Windows, on the other hand, has changed little under the hood, but the look, and workflow, have changed massively. Microsoft seem determined to drive people away, which is fine by me.
Hi, it is always interesting to see an old computer Linux revival. Back in the old days (25 years ago) when Ubuntu did not exists, the Debian installation was not so easy because you have had to know a lot about your hardware before even turning the computer on, this (hopefully) has changed, a lot…
Hardy Heron was my intro to Linux, Vaio was my introduction to laptops, and Lemmy was my respite from the internet of 2023. This video's got it all, and I am so happy
Seems that an oscilloscope and a lot of probing could be beneficial to get an actual graphics card in that system. If you do figure it out, those rainbow jumper wires between the mainboard and the VGA port header on the card would be the obvious choice.
Oohhhh. I remember ordering an Ubuntu 7-something version disc from Canonical to stretch out the usefulness of an old PowerPC iBook. Much prefer this classic interface vs. the 'dock' they started using.
The internal screen is probably connected using an LVDS interface. You can probably get it working using a generic LVDS controller board to adapt it to VGA or DVI, but it would probably be best to get the model of the panel and look for a controller that is known to be compatible. That being said, that is just based on my experiences with other AIOs and not any knowledge about the Vaio specifically.
Thank you for revisiting this dear OS, I still miss those adventurous days, when I was truly convinced that the Day of Linux was just around the corner. 😅. I wonder how modern ubuntu MATE would run on that hardware. You would need a 64 bit CPU however. And of course that ATI video card would help. But that would absolutely showcase how Linux can literally revive any old crusty piece of rusty metal and silicon. I would use it as a daily driver for sure!
Classic Ubuntu was how I got into Linux at first. I used to have this on an old HP Windows XP laptop sometime around 2011, I remember when the performance was really poor due to how low-spec it was. Now, currently in 2023, I use Linux Mint for mostly everything on my daily driver.
This really takes me back to 2007, first year of college, learning whatever I could learn about computers and receiving a CD package from Canonical with Ubuntu 7.04 Gutsy Gibon, since I didn't have a computer of my own at that time, I installed it in a friend's Intel Dual Core home assembled with 4GB and 320GB HDD, dual booting along with Windows Vista Home Basic. I felt like a hacker back then. Canonical kept sending me CDs for 2 more years, I got Ubuntu, Kubuntu and Xubuntu, also I got some DVDs from Sun Microsystems with Solaris and Open Solaris.
Weird and fun... very Sean. I do remember running that version of Ubuntu. It's fun to see the old Linux distros getting some love. Thanks for the hackery. As for the VAIO -- it's just kind of sad-- unless there was one with a minidisc.
It would be cool if it was possible to plug in the internal monitor to the pci gpu, maybe using an IDE extension cable, but that would probably mean lots of poking around with an oscilloscope, sony probably did not provide a pinout or service manual. Also the startup sound brings back a lot of memories. I think I first used Ubuntu in 2009 with karmic koala, at least in terms of dual booting it with Windows XP or even 7 at that point. EDIT: must have been an older version, I just checked the big Ubuntu book that I bought, that one has 9.04 in it, but I downloaded and used it before.
That idea of hard wiring the video card's output would be superb!!! Can't wait to see the project video!!! Cheers. Also, is it possible that you could create an image of that Ubuntu release with the repository fixes please and upload it some where for us non guru's to download and use? I would like to use it for an old laptop I have that barely can run anything and it's only 32bit X86 intel Atom processor with only 1.5 Gig Ram
On Monday I will be celebrating 18 years as a Linux user. To mark the occasion I have installed a tree in my house, I'm singing wintery-themed songs, and I shall eat a rich dense pudding with brandy-soaked fruit. I'm not sure what these traditions have to do with Ubuntu, but I remember my family doing this on 25 December 2005 when I first booted Linux, so I've continued this strange practice.
I still remember upgrading from Gutsy to Hardy and seeing that lovely wallpaper for the first time. I wish Ubuntu would go back to their old earth tones color scheme. Purple just doesn't hit the same.
Hardy heron was a milestone for ubuntu. I installed ubuntu 8.04 on a lot of my friends' laptops. It was the first distro that support a bunch of wifi cards by default. Now ubuntu is so busy pushing its snap package that annoy its users.
So, there used to be a pin out floating around to route the vga(might have even been dvi) signal to the internal monitor since there were several other vaio machines that had the same 40 pin ide connectors to route the onboard graphics display out internally. I'll look a little bit but with some digging we might get lucky. I vividly remember on a forum a guy using the display out from the video card with some dupont male to female cables going to the "ide" ribbons of the display to the gpu and using hotglue to hold them in.. yea, hotglue on dupont connectors but you cant fault it not working. Proper hackery though.
This really brings back some memories. Ubuntu 8.04 was the first Linux version I used regularly. The hard drive in my laptop at the time died, so I ran off of a live disc for a few years until I finally bought a cheap external hard drive. Other than crashing once the system ran out of RAM, it worked great.
I remember ordering one of those free Ubuntu disks for the hell of it, thinking it would never show up I don’t think I even used it, I was a Gentoo kid
Pure nostalgia for me. Ubuntu 8.04 was my first ever contact with Linux. I was only 12 years old and thought it looked really nice on the cover of a magazine. Now, a couple years later I finally finished my LPIC-1.
Man, that box art just reminded me of what that Ubuntu symbol was supposed to represent. It just kinda faded into the back of my mind after all these years.
Love classic Ubuntu, especially considering how much effort went into building free software back then. Nowadays everyone has their own distro but Ubuntu really did change the entire linux landscape and help get a lot of people including 14 year old me into open source. 12.04 was my first but I remember using 10.04 on a really really old system lol
I legit didn’t know that there was a repository that still allows old Ubuntu versions to install packages from the web in 2023! That’s mind blowing! I love going for the newer of the new in Linux computers, but this is still awesome!
6.06 was when I knew about ubuntu....package I didn't order or have knowledge of showed up with 10 cds of Ubuntu 6.06 in 32bit, 64 bit and PowerPC. And a few stickers. That was a motivation to finally buy a laptop for college.
This is so awesome. I always enjoy your videos. Ubuntu was my very first Linux distro back in the day with a old knarley Toshiba laptop with a broken screen and net zero free dialup with the big banner across the top lol.
I assume this Vaio is 32 bit. There are a number of currently supported 32 bit Linuxes that would continue to be updated/supported. A few examples are Debian, Sparky, MX-Linux, Bodhi. Linux Mint Debian Edition (LMDE), Mageia, OpenSUSE, RebeccaBlack and Void among others. Some are just as sophisticated looking as Ubuntu. Some, like Sparky, are plain looking, but even smaller, and work just as well. How much RAM does it have? Processor speed? Thanks.
I really didn't expected Saurbraten to work as it did on that card. The AMD drivers back then (Mesa or even proprietary) were...well, not so good). There was another one I used to play extensively back then, can't remember the name...maybe Free Arena or something. Anyway, I'm impressed how well everything went with this machine and Linux.
I first used that Ubuntu version on an A31 Thinkpad assembled from two wrecks. I copied that install upgraded to 10.04 to a T61 that replaced it after it died. I used the PAE patch (remember the upgraded install was still 32-bit) so I could run 8GB RAM and found the per process limit prevented Firefox from hanging the system!
At my school the IT class were given a load of old PC's to learn about components from (I was roped in to help because the teachers weren't very knowledgeable). Several were Sony Vaio towers with PCI tuner cards just like that one. Some also had RCA connectors broken out at the bottom of the case, which I think plugged into the PCI card. Sadly they didn't work.
Ubuntu 10.04LTS was my first Linux experience in junior college. My computer teacher showed us the OS in class, and had told us that “the world isn’t just windows,” which I scoffed at at the time but I guess he had the last laugh now lol. Anyway, I went home to try it out since it was free, and boy, for someone that was curious about getting things working in other operating systems but didn’t have the technical know-how to use something more advanced, this was fantastic. The commands were easy to learn, the GNOME interface was intuitive, and the official forums were super friendly and a must to get more advanced processes going. I don’t know if there’s an experience like that anymore, but I hope there is for the younger crowd, because Windows is awful and a novice computer tinkerer needs something to spark their curiosity.
I remember these old Ubuntu versions. Dapper Drake 6.04 for example. But this one looks similar. 10.04 was one I used for a long time as well. Although that had the Unity desktop environment. It’s nice that we have Ubuntu MATE and Ubuntu Unity to still get the old Ubuntu feel.
Actually it was 6.06 - they gave it an extra two months development time! My first version was 5.10 and I first started using it on Christmas Day 2005. Whenever Santa Claus visits our house I remember trying to get the 5.10 Live CD working on an iMac :)
That version of Ubuntu must have aligned with my bit of time messing around with Linux as a primary OS because Hardy Heron is the only Ubuntu adjective animal I can remember!
I still have an old Ubuntu CD laying around somewhere that they sent me for free. Not that old though, I think it was 9.04 as the timeline matches up with roughly when I got it. They kept sending those out for a long time, long after most people stopped using optical media, as I checked years later and the offer was still there.
On the 64-bit Pentium 4 - the Socket 775 P4s had most of them 64-bit capable, the rarity is only for the Socket 478. And it requires BIOS support - I can guarantee that AIO won’t support the 64-bit CPU. (At all, it won’t even boot, unlike some later S775 boards that may be capable of booting with a 64-bit CPU, but won’t run in 64-bit mode.)
I'm so glad that X1300 is getting used for this. I was expecting it to get modded by dosdude1 and slapped into a G3 for absolutely cursed upgraded graphics, but this is way way way more fun to see. Also glad to see that the system played nice with it! under Windows, you have to remove one of the OpenGL DLLs from a folder in order for stuff to work properly with that specific card to prevent green-screening... but it was also a common problem with others too. Fun to note that the fan in that is from a Quadro 600, and I had to modify the hell out of the back of it to get it to work in that heatsink, as the old fan failed and I was tight on time to get it working for my own needs before I moved onto something else. However, it seems to work just fine missing a couple of blades and still keeps the card relatively cool!
Ubuntu 8.04 is also my first Version of Linux. I was 7 years old and my PC back in the days was a late 90s HP Vectra VL Series 6 with a Pentium 2 400Mhz and 192 MB of Ram. Everything runs sluggish but it runs. And i have very good memorys of using it despite it was so sluggish
Ubuntu 8.04 was my first Linux os, threw it on a laptop my coach didn't want anymore. Felt like I was 10 years in the future software wise, even if Compiz was taking up 75% of the system resources lol Also, if the connection is not VGA or DVI internally, it's probably LVDS, which nowadays you can get adapters for cheaply. Can't wait for the VAIO AIO sleeper build! Wish I could do one myself. (TBH I would even consider a screen swap to a 4k if you go the sleeper route!)
So many good memories! I may still have some of those cds laying around! Just by curiosity, is there any real advantage on having such old distro, comparing to newer ones?
Oh that start up brings back memories, high school IT class. except we were using Ubuntu 10 or 11 i think i'm surprised they were using the start up for that long
This was my second Linux distro... I'd been using Red Hat 8 and 9 until Ubuntu 8. Then I moved to it for an easier app install/update process. This vid really brings back memories.
This is interesting to see. The first Ubuntu I ever tried was Lucid Lynx which had a more modern interface.I still had dialup then so I had to order a CD.
Man, that's a throw back, My first run with ubuntu was 7.04 IIRC. I got it on the mailed cd since we had DSL at 1.5 mbps shared across our family. I remember getting my multi desktop to be a moveable cube I could switch between.
Good ol' Hardy Heron was my first introduction to Linux (I actually tried Gentoo before that but it went about as well as you'd expect. I really liked GNOME 2, had it set up with all of the Compiz effects. I also remember getting a USB wireless card and having to use ndiswrapper to make it work, things are most certainly better now lol.
Hardy heron was an awesome release. I have a lot of nostalgia for it somehow. It is the version that was out when I was in my first year of high school
First Linux I used on daily basis was Ubuntu 9.10 (I was still dual-booting with Windows back then). A little bit later than 8.04. I tried some version of Mandrake/Mandriva before, but it didn't run very well on my machine. Nvidia cards didn't play very well with Linux back then and I had no ATI card to swap.
"I can quit installing Linux whenever i want"
"I just don't want to"
"It's not that bad for my health"
Best addiction to have haha
I have same problem
Parents, talk to your children about Linux before someone else does.
Ubuntu 8.04 was how I discovered Linux. My mom was part of some online forum that shared links to free things you could sign up for, and this was one of them - same CD sleeve and everything! I recall wanting to badly to replace Windows XP on my laptop, but after some trial and error, it ran so poorly on my hardware that I reverted. Still have this tucked away on my shelf of software somwhere.
For me it was ubuntu 10.04 with compiz, and emerald window manager, stil fancy the cube and wobbly windows and the burning windows.
12.04 Precise pangolin was my first, always have a soft spot for it.
Ubuntu 8.04 was also how I discovered Linux. I borked my XP install by compressing NTLDR and didn’t have install media, but the library would loan out a Ubuntu 8.04 LTS book with accompanying install media, so my Dell Optiplex GX240 ran Ubuntu Hardy Heron for quite a while.
It was my second Linux... I'd been using Red Hat 8 and 9 until Ubuntu 8. Then I moved to it for an easier app install/update process. This vid really brings back memories.
@@arnorobinwerkman for me it was also 10.04, some guy did some workshop at a nearby elementary school computer lab and handed out CDs with 10.04 on them
Oh my Lord. The startup sound. I..I just can't. That brings back so many memories. I've been using Ubuntu since 6.06. And that sound is just glorious
It's a damn shame that the epic soundscape of 2000er linux distros is not used anymore
Man... right into the feels
I loved those sounds! Then always turned them all off within a day of installing 😅
An early adopter, noice. I myself have been using it non-stop since 5.04.
y’all don’t know how it feels, i’ve been using it since the first version released to public
I always appreciated that you just blur the thermal paste application. Some people just can't handle it
most sane thing to do on youtube
He should blur out the applicator but show the paste itself being deposited…. 😂
He applied the thermal paste the right way, and also the wrong way. There's way too much and not nearly enough. So there, whatever way you fall on the issue, I got you covered (pun intended). #ThermalPasteOpinions
Guess you can say that it was "too hot to handle".
thermal paste cant be shown on YT, its a hot subject O.o You never do it right.
Oh my God, that startup sound instantly transported me back to the late 2000s 😂 I had SO MUCH fun with Ubuntu on a tiny Acer netbook back then. Messing up the system after tweaking it "a bit" too much launched a routine of bi-weekly re-installs of Ubuntu 👀
I remember when I tried Ubuntu for the first time.
I was about 15 years old and I read about the system on the Internet, since I had a dial-up modem I couldn't download, so I tried to get the CD in physical format, I sent the request and after a few weeks I received the CD in a white padded bag . As a plastic bag, with some Ubuntu stickers to use.
It was Ubuntu 6.0 Dapper Drake, and I remember very well that I went to my school to see if I could get "a real dial-up modem" because I have a WinModem that was like a simple board and almost 100% drivers for Windows.
So I couldn't use it on Linux.
I got a dedicated Motorola so I could finally use it.
What times...
Had the same problem, started using Linux for real with Ubuntu 9.10 and a DSL connection, very nice version btw.
Man.. I am glad I found this channel. It's been a blast from the past and there's no magic cuts to where everything is magically working. I really appreciate having real videos that show the struggles of working with 20+ year old hardware. Keep on keepin on! You're awesome!
I laughed out loud when I saw you blur the thermal paste application! Then I immediately became concerned about what's in your browser history...
5:46 thats true for that socket 478 version, but in LGA775 versions, not only were 64bit P4's common, many were 3ghz and above, plus hyperthreaded. I have a 2ghz version of that 478 P4 in my Win98 machine on a Gigabyte board, but ive had no urge to overclock it (the board does allow for it).
I would love to see the TV Tuner situation on 8.10. I remember having a tuner card and recording shows on a schedule from Ubuntu Studio and running XBMC to watch them all and sync to my iPod video.
I would say all Ubuntu versions before unity have the best interface, UI design, and also system sounds. Also it was stable and also has the most authentic design in terms of wallpapers and theming.
You never really understand the value of something until it's gone. Why did they have to remove such amazing sounds from the current version of Ubuntu?
I think startup sounds really just went away in general in all recent OSes.
Because boring is trendy in OS design these days.
Because they could not fix the bug with uninitialized volume levels before the desktop is completely loaded. People kept complaining.
@@wallyhackenslacker It must be true. I miss screensavers and compiz effects too.
@@SuperDavidEFUbuntu MATE still has Compiz all effects available
Socket 478 wasn't actually the last intel pga socket, that honour goes to socket G3, the last laptop socket (at least on the intel side). 478 was the last on the intel desktop though, unless someone used high end laptop parts in a desktop up to 2014.
You have no idea how much your videos help my mental health. I'm not in dire straits, but these shenanigans bring a lot of joy to Mondays, which are my most chaotic work days. So, thank you.
Take care, stranger. Yr not alone.
@@magickmarck Thank you! Indeed, I am extremely fortunate. I have a fantastic family and amazing therapists. But sometimes, days are mbeh and honestly, retro shenanigans bring a smile to my face. I thought he should know.
Take care, yourself! Life is pretty nice :)
Man I remember these "free shipping" Ubuntu CDs fondly, including the stickers they came with.
I actually ordered that same ubuntu dvd and was very pleasantly surprised when I received it in mail. I never believed they would ship to India back then
I have never used Linux in that era, only after 2015 or so. Interesting to see what the Ubuntu experience is like while watching this on Ubuntu 23.10 and you just introduced me to Sauerbraten, absolutely love it haha
Brings back fond memories! My first version of Ubuntu was 6.10, which I tried for a few days until 7.04 was released (which was a lot less buggy). Ubuntu 8.04 LTS would be the first version that I installed on some other people’s computers, most of them running Windows Vista originally. Seeing the colour scheme, hearing the login sound and seeing that classic GNOME 2 desktop in action really brings back good memories!
On the other hand, I do remember how hard it was back in those days to do things like watch online video, or the availability of software. There have most definitely been great strides in making the Linux desktop Just Work, helped by the general move towards the web.
This was ubuntu at it's peak, no joke
Hardy Heron was the release that got me to finally switch to Linux full time, after dipping my toe into 6.06 a couple of years earlier.
My desktop still looks like the one I had back then, which to me, is the most important thing. The underlying OS has changed massively, but I have hardly noticed it.
Windows, on the other hand, has changed little under the hood, but the look, and workflow, have changed massively.
Microsoft seem determined to drive people away, which is fine by me.
What were the chances of actually saying "8.04" at exactly 8:04 ? Great editing skills, truly :)
Hi, it is always interesting to see an old computer Linux revival.
Back in the old days (25 years ago) when Ubuntu did not exists, the Debian installation was not so easy because you have had to know a lot about your hardware before even turning the computer on, this (hopefully) has changed, a lot…
Love how you censored the thermal paste despite being clearly an X pattern. Not getting away from internet critics that easily lol.
Hardy Heron was my intro to Linux, Vaio was my introduction to laptops, and Lemmy was my respite from the internet of 2023. This video's got it all, and I am so happy
i remember getting this very version shipped to me in college blast from the past fr
Seems that an oscilloscope and a lot of probing could be beneficial to get an actual graphics card in that system. If you do figure it out, those rainbow jumper wires between the mainboard and the VGA port header on the card would be the obvious choice.
Oohhhh. I remember ordering an Ubuntu 7-something version disc from Canonical to stretch out the usefulness of an old PowerPC iBook. Much prefer this classic interface vs. the 'dock' they started using.
The internal screen is probably connected using an LVDS interface. You can probably get it working using a generic LVDS controller board to adapt it to VGA or DVI, but it would probably be best to get the model of the panel and look for a controller that is known to be compatible. That being said, that is just based on my experiences with other AIOs and not any knowledge about the Vaio specifically.
Finally! The insides! I so glad you posted this, I was quite curious about them.
Thank you for revisiting this dear OS, I still miss those adventurous days, when I was truly convinced that the Day of Linux was just around the corner. 😅. I wonder how modern ubuntu MATE would run on that hardware. You would need a 64 bit CPU however. And of course that ATI video card would help. But that would absolutely showcase how Linux can literally revive any old crusty piece of rusty metal and silicon. I would use it as a daily driver for sure!
Classic Ubuntu was how I got into Linux at first. I used to have this on an old HP Windows XP laptop sometime around 2011, I remember when the performance was really poor due to how low-spec it was. Now, currently in 2023, I use Linux Mint for mostly everything on my daily driver.
UBUNTU 8.04 saved my life!!! those tones made my night!
Oh gosh. 8.04 was the first Linux I properly used as well, this brought back some cool old memories. Awesome stuff.
MANNNNN The Nostalgia of that boot up noise.... Pristine, my friend.
Nice to see Ubuntu running on the Vaio PC…
This really takes me back to 2007, first year of college, learning whatever I could learn about computers and receiving a CD package from Canonical with Ubuntu 7.04 Gutsy Gibon, since I didn't have a computer of my own at that time, I installed it in a friend's Intel Dual Core home assembled with 4GB and 320GB HDD, dual booting along with Windows Vista Home Basic. I felt like a hacker back then. Canonical kept sending me CDs for 2 more years, I got Ubuntu, Kubuntu and Xubuntu, also I got some DVDs from Sun Microsystems with Solaris and Open Solaris.
Weird and fun... very Sean. I do remember running that version of Ubuntu. It's fun to see the old Linux distros getting some love. Thanks for the hackery. As for the VAIO -- it's just kind of sad-- unless there was one with a minidisc.
Awww, Hardy Heron. Brings back memories of trying to run it on my old laptop and failing in the process
It would be cool if it was possible to plug in the internal monitor to the pci gpu, maybe using an IDE extension cable, but that would probably mean lots of poking around with an oscilloscope, sony probably did not provide a pinout or service manual.
Also the startup sound brings back a lot of memories. I think I first used Ubuntu in 2009 with karmic koala, at least in terms of dual booting it with Windows XP or even 7 at that point.
EDIT: must have been an older version, I just checked the big Ubuntu book that I bought, that one has 9.04 in it, but I downloaded and used it before.
Hardy Heron was my first ubuntu! I remember finding it very stylish at the time and those sounds are just wonderful.
That idea of hard wiring the video card's output would be superb!!! Can't wait to see the project video!!! Cheers. Also, is it possible that you could create an image of that Ubuntu release with the repository fixes please and upload it some where for us non guru's to download and use? I would like to use it for an old laptop I have that barely can run anything and it's only 32bit X86 intel Atom processor with only 1.5 Gig Ram
On Monday I will be celebrating 18 years as a Linux user. To mark the occasion I have installed a tree in my house, I'm singing wintery-themed songs, and I shall eat a rich dense pudding with brandy-soaked fruit. I'm not sure what these traditions have to do with Ubuntu, but I remember my family doing this on 25 December 2005 when I first booted Linux, so I've continued this strange practice.
I still remember upgrading from Gutsy to Hardy and seeing that lovely wallpaper for the first time. I wish Ubuntu would go back to their old earth tones color scheme. Purple just doesn't hit the same.
Hardy heron was a milestone for ubuntu. I installed ubuntu 8.04 on a lot of my friends' laptops. It was the first distro that support a bunch of wifi cards by default.
Now ubuntu is so busy pushing its snap package that annoy its users.
So, there used to be a pin out floating around to route the vga(might have even been dvi) signal to the internal monitor since there were several other vaio machines that had the same 40 pin ide connectors to route the onboard graphics display out internally. I'll look a little bit but with some digging we might get lucky. I vividly remember on a forum a guy using the display out from the video card with some dupont male to female cables going to the "ide" ribbons of the display to the gpu and using hotglue to hold them in.. yea, hotglue on dupont connectors but you cant fault it not working. Proper hackery though.
Woah awesome!!
This really brings back some memories. Ubuntu 8.04 was the first Linux version I used regularly. The hard drive in my laptop at the time died, so I ran off of a live disc for a few years until I finally bought a cheap external hard drive. Other than crashing once the system ran out of RAM, it worked great.
I remember ordering one of those free Ubuntu disks for the hell of it, thinking it would never show up
I don’t think I even used it, I was a Gentoo kid
Pure nostalgia for me. Ubuntu 8.04 was my first ever contact with Linux. I was only 12 years old and thought it looked really nice on the cover of a magazine. Now, a couple years later I finally finished my LPIC-1.
Man, that box art just reminded me of what that Ubuntu symbol was supposed to represent.
It just kinda faded into the back of my mind after all these years.
that startup sound is actually pretty cool.
Love classic Ubuntu, especially considering how much effort went into building free software back then. Nowadays everyone has their own distro but Ubuntu really did change the entire linux landscape and help get a lot of people including 14 year old me into open source. 12.04 was my first but I remember using 10.04 on a really really old system lol
Ubuntu isn't my favorite distro these days but I'm glad to see Linux bringing an old PC back to life.
It "just works" though and that's a thing of beauty imo
That startup sound also used in Windows XP XTreme (Modified russian build of Windows XP) as shutdown sound.
I legit didn’t know that there was a repository that still allows old Ubuntu versions to install packages from the web in 2023! That’s mind blowing! I love going for the newer of the new in Linux computers, but this is still awesome!
I remember this version of Ubuntu! I always felt so cool having an official disc of this and kubuntu
Damn, that log in Ubuntu sound brought me so many memories.
6.06 was when I knew about ubuntu....package I didn't order or have knowledge of showed up with 10 cds of Ubuntu 6.06 in 32bit, 64 bit and PowerPC. And a few stickers. That was a motivation to finally buy a laptop for college.
Great video, it was fun watching. Thank you for sharing your passion with us.
I miss the Ship-It program a bunch. It was such a neat idea.
This is so awesome. I always enjoy your videos. Ubuntu was my very first Linux distro back in the day with a old knarley Toshiba laptop with a broken screen and net zero free dialup with the big banner across the top lol.
that startup sound is the greatest.
I assume this Vaio is 32 bit. There are a number of currently supported 32 bit Linuxes that would continue to be updated/supported. A few examples are Debian, Sparky, MX-Linux, Bodhi. Linux Mint Debian Edition (LMDE), Mageia, OpenSUSE, RebeccaBlack and Void among others. Some are just as sophisticated looking as Ubuntu. Some, like Sparky, are plain looking, but even smaller, and work just as well. How much RAM does it have? Processor speed? Thanks.
I have it at 1gb RAM and 2.4ghz, 32 bit. I've used Bodhi before and like it a lot - maybe I'll give that a try on here.
I really didn't expected Saurbraten to work as it did on that card. The AMD drivers back then (Mesa or even proprietary) were...well, not so good). There was another one I used to play extensively back then, can't remember the name...maybe Free Arena or something. Anyway, I'm impressed how well everything went with this machine and Linux.
I first used that Ubuntu version on an A31 Thinkpad assembled from two wrecks. I copied that install upgraded to 10.04 to a T61 that replaced it after it died. I used the PAE patch (remember the upgraded install was still 32-bit) so I could run 8GB RAM and found the per process limit prevented Firefox from hanging the system!
8.04 is also my first version! And I have the same Live CD still!
That desktop is such a nostalgia punch
Those sound effects take me back!
At my school the IT class were given a load of old PC's to learn about components from (I was roped in to help because the teachers weren't very knowledgeable). Several were Sony Vaio towers with PCI tuner cards just like that one. Some also had RCA connectors broken out at the bottom of the case, which I think plugged into the PCI card. Sadly they didn't work.
Ubuntu 10.04LTS was my first Linux experience in junior college. My computer teacher showed us the OS in class, and had told us that “the world isn’t just windows,” which I scoffed at at the time but I guess he had the last laugh now lol. Anyway, I went home to try it out since it was free, and boy, for someone that was curious about getting things working in other operating systems but didn’t have the technical know-how to use something more advanced, this was fantastic. The commands were easy to learn, the GNOME interface was intuitive, and the official forums were super friendly and a must to get more advanced processes going. I don’t know if there’s an experience like that anymore, but I hope there is for the younger crowd, because Windows is awful and a novice computer tinkerer needs something to spark their curiosity.
aah, the time that Ubuntu came with a good taskbar and menu!
Miss it! (yes I know you can change that, or there are different flavors)
Yes! Try to get that video card connected to that internal display!
I remember these old Ubuntu versions. Dapper Drake 6.04 for example. But this one looks similar. 10.04 was one I used for a long time as well. Although that had the Unity desktop environment. It’s nice that we have Ubuntu MATE and Ubuntu Unity to still get the old Ubuntu feel.
Actually it was 6.06 - they gave it an extra two months development time!
My first version was 5.10 and I first started using it on Christmas Day 2005. Whenever Santa Claus visits our house I remember trying to get the 5.10 Live CD working on an iMac :)
That version of Ubuntu must have aligned with my bit of time messing around with Linux as a primary OS because Hardy Heron is the only Ubuntu adjective animal I can remember!
Man of all things, seeing Sauerbraten took me back hard! And I agree, the music is fantastic
I still have an old Ubuntu CD laying around somewhere that they sent me for free. Not that old though, I think it was 9.04 as the timeline matches up with roughly when I got it. They kept sending those out for a long time, long after most people stopped using optical media, as I checked years later and the offer was still there.
On the 64-bit Pentium 4 - the Socket 775 P4s had most of them 64-bit capable, the rarity is only for the Socket 478. And it requires BIOS support - I can guarantee that AIO won’t support the 64-bit CPU. (At all, it won’t even boot, unlike some later S775 boards that may be capable of booting with a 64-bit CPU, but won’t run in 64-bit mode.)
I'm so glad that X1300 is getting used for this. I was expecting it to get modded by dosdude1 and slapped into a G3 for absolutely cursed upgraded graphics, but this is way way way more fun to see. Also glad to see that the system played nice with it! under Windows, you have to remove one of the OpenGL DLLs from a folder in order for stuff to work properly with that specific card to prevent green-screening... but it was also a common problem with others too. Fun to note that the fan in that is from a Quadro 600, and I had to modify the hell out of the back of it to get it to work in that heatsink, as the old fan failed and I was tight on time to get it working for my own needs before I moved onto something else. However, it seems to work just fine missing a couple of blades and still keeps the card relatively cool!
Use Lemmy? Mötörhead fans would take exception to that! 😆
What in the VTech is that?
Thanks for blurring out the thermal paste application my 9 year old dog was watching this.
Ubuntu 8.04 is also my first Version of Linux. I was 7 years old and my PC back in the days was a late 90s HP Vectra VL Series 6 with a Pentium 2 400Mhz and 192 MB of Ram. Everything runs sluggish but it runs. And i have very good memorys of using it despite it was so sluggish
Classic Ubuntu! So beautiful!
Ubuntu 8.04 and 6.06 were the best version of Ubuntu. Just many personal fond memories
Ubuntu 8.04 was my first Linux os, threw it on a laptop my coach didn't want anymore. Felt like I was 10 years in the future software wise, even if Compiz was taking up 75% of the system resources lol
Also, if the connection is not VGA or DVI internally, it's probably LVDS, which nowadays you can get adapters for cheaply. Can't wait for the VAIO AIO sleeper build! Wish I could do one myself. (TBH I would even consider a screen swap to a 4k if you go the sleeper route!)
I remember machines like this from Sony, so wonderfully premium and different but so pricy back in the day. Playing with one now would be awesome!
So many good memories! I may still have some of those cds laying around! Just by curiosity, is there any real advantage on having such old distro, comparing to newer ones?
I remember trying to install this on my crappy PowerBook G3. So much wasted time. Loved it.
I love your linux content! Keep up the good work
Oh that start up brings back memories, high school IT class.
except we were using Ubuntu 10 or 11 i think
i'm surprised they were using the start up for that long
This was my second Linux distro... I'd been using Red Hat 8 and 9 until Ubuntu 8. Then I moved to it for an easier app install/update process. This vid really brings back memories.
So nostalgic for this vintage of ubuntu
AHHH classic Ubuntu sounds are fantastic. I need to find a pack and put it on my laptop lol
Are you going to VCF this year Sean? I might go for the first time AND do an exhibit! (maybe some cursed PowerPC stuff and an Apple II 😀)
This is interesting to see. The first Ubuntu I ever tried was Lucid Lynx which had a more modern interface.I still had dialup then so I had to order a CD.
Man, that's a throw back, My first run with ubuntu was 7.04 IIRC. I got it on the mailed cd since we had DSL at 1.5 mbps shared across our family. I remember getting my multi desktop to be a moveable cube I could switch between.
I found copies of Ubuntu, Kubuntu back when they were shipped freely when I was a kid. Oh those were the days.
Good ol' Hardy Heron was my first introduction to Linux (I actually tried Gentoo before that but it went about as well as you'd expect. I really liked GNOME 2, had it set up with all of the Compiz effects. I also remember getting a USB wireless card and having to use ndiswrapper to make it work, things are most certainly better now lol.
Back then Nvidia GPU drivers just worked 😂
Hardy heron was an awesome release. I have a lot of nostalgia for it somehow. It is the version that was out when I was in my first year of high school
my first Ubuntu was the very first one - 4.10 (Warty Warthog). I think I still have some of the CD's that canonical gave out for that lying around.
Ubuntu 9.04 was the first linux i ever used and ever heard of. I was 10 at the time, i am now 24 and currently use both Ubuntu and Windows.
First Linux I used on daily basis was Ubuntu 9.10 (I was still dual-booting with Windows back then). A little bit later than 8.04. I tried some version of Mandrake/Mandriva before, but it didn't run very well on my machine. Nvidia cards didn't play very well with Linux back then and I had no ATI card to swap.