Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Circa 2001/2002, I had a lot of fun learning SUSE Linux where we had CDs of the OS that we could install. I remember being able to do a partition on my Windows (98/XP) and installing SuSE Linux on it. Fun times.


CDs were common in redhat (still without the E of Enterprise linux), debian, slackware and all...

But what to say about the manuals?

Those manuals and books included with the CDs, in the box.

For me they were a catalyst in my Linux learning.

Really good quality manuals, with reference tables, and covering many (many) topics. From the the graphical environment to the command line, from the administration of the local system, to network services, good structure, nice tips, cheatsheets, reference tables, even covering kernel compilation!

As you say, they did include everything needed, to live together with win98... tools, floppy images, etc... and the documentation about howto do it beforehand.

In that modem times, with low speed internet, the CDs where valuable, indeed.

But those books included in the box, for people like me in such times (self-taught beginner with Linux) those manuals were like gold!

Did use my first linux from a CD in a computers magazine.

Did play with redhat, and debian, then I did buy my first suse box with suse 6.0 (around 1999), and did buy again the box for suse 7 and 8.

Latter I did get faster internet, and did jump 100% to debian for everything. But I still have those manuals with my books.

The complete package (cds + books) is something that I remember fondly for how useful it was to me, and a lot of respect for the work of the people who made it.


Agreed. I have dozen books on Linux in my home office and of course there's the Internets...

But I've never ever found something so cohesive, comprehensive,understandable and with a great guided curve. I kept them long past obsolescence as they just couldn't be replaced by anything better :-/


+1 - I learned a lot from those giant manuals. I also remembered calling their (free at the time, I believe?) customer support hotline about issues with some printer and the guy dictating a bunch of kernel parameters to me over the phone (which did fix the issue!). Different times ...


Definitely better than me asking help to install some pre-1.0 KDE beta in an IRC channel somewhere in the 90's. Some helpful hacker asked me to give them the root access so they could install KDE for me. I guess that's how I learned about not trusting everybody...


Just to add another tale from the past:

Sometime in the late 90s I ordered a Red Hat CD from cheapbytes.com (CD burners weren't common yet). I didn't have a credit card yet, but I did have a checking account, so I paid for the order by mailing in a check.


"CD Burners"

Yep. They used to be premium in the 90s and even early 2000s. I remember how you were special if you had a CD burner on your computer instead of a regular CD Player :). Kinda like difference between a VCP and VCR for even older kids.


> Fun times

Is still fun! There is Tumbleweed, a full rolling distribution (all packages with its own update cadence, and OBS fully building the dependencies that are impacted). There is also MicroOS, a transactional OS (BtrFS subvolumes for rootfs are read-only, and the update happens in the snapshot that will be activated after the reboot, providing a self-healing system when an upgrade does not affect the running environment)

Also Leap, but this is indeed boring (15.3 will be based fully in SLE binaries)


What goes around, comes around - I am writing this comment on a laptop running Tumbleweed, with another one running Leap 15.2 sitting next to me.

Coming back to Suse was a bit like coming home. (-:


>Coming back to Suse was a bit like coming home.

Oh that's so true, i started with 7.2 or .1, but never worked well, so i switched to mandrake, then a ~decade Debian, and now back (about 2years ago) to OpenSuse Leap (but with XFS as / and just on the laptop) everything else FreeBSD.


It really feels like there is a Suse renaissance happening. MicroOS is particularly interesting.

I wish them nothing but success, now that IBM has RHEL, maybe SLES will get new attention.


Was it SUSE that had tetris (or maybe pacman) available while the CD installer was running?


Suse has a special bootloader around Christmas:

https://siasky.net/NACTymsHp70KBDeyHDUlyO-XHW6nMidXO-4PM4aYy...


that was Caldera!


Wow, never would have recalled that on my own, but now I've got vivid memories of the unix lab...


I remember getting a CD of Suse with a C't magazine and that the installation process simply borked in the middle after a long while.

That was that until it worked like a charm with better driver support (and a Debian based distro) a few years later.


I remember getting my grandad to buy me a copy of SUSE from pcworld back around that time. I completely destroyed my home pc trying to install it, but I learned a lot putting all that right.


I remember buying SUSE in a damn Best Buy. What a world...


My first experience with Linux was also after ordering their CD package... maybe around 5 discs? I almost remember first time ever logging in through the terminal after installation. Wow


Me too, but 2000/2001 - I still have the box and the CDs. SuSE Linux 7.0 Personal Edition.

I did not anticipate how much of an impact on my life that was going to have.

TL;DR - Go Suse! (-:




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: