One year since I left Windows behind…Ubuntu

 One year ago I was definitely a Linux user. Almost all of my work was done with Linux running on my machine. But every once in a while I needed to use some apps that only ran in Windows, so I always kept a Windows installation ready to be used. One year and one month ago I needed to do a work that necessarily needed Windows to run, so I made a fresh installation. I finished that work and by the end of the month that it lasted my “fresh” Windows installation was already a mess, it took about five minutes to start up and I got desperate. I thought it was time to clean my computer and leave no Windows in it. So I started looking for the best distro out there to be installed and to be in my workstation all the time. I had been a continuous user of different distros, but Fedora was almost always my choice. I had my time with Debian, Mandrake, Slack, RedHat, Gentoo and Suse. All of those distros where the base of my workstation for different periods.
    I tried a lot of the new Distros that were available one year ago. I even thought to have a live distro that could serve as a workstation. And in my research I found another  installation that was called Ubuntu. It was only one CD so I never took it seriously because I like to have as much applications installed to try and to play with. But I was desperate so I installed it. Then another big job at the office needed to be done and I didn’t have time to be playing with more distros, so I started working with the distro that I had installed.   
    I remember that I loved the fact that it recognized my wireless card and my display on the fly. I always had a hard work configurating my wireless card and in many occasions I had to invert a few hours configurating the X server to have my wide screen ready to work. So I had Internet and my display was fine, everything I needed to start working. I have been always a Gnome boy, so it was no problem for me that the distro didn’t have KDE.
    One year ago I was working on that distro that was going to serve me meanwhile I found a decent distro, and I was almost sure that at the end of December I would have Fedora running on my processor. And surprisingly since one year ago I have only formatted my OS partition to install a new OS, and that was when the new distro of Ubuntu came up.
    Ubuntu simply made me fall in love for it. “Humanity for others”, Debian based, great application set, great and active community, and among everything else great package management. Out of the many things that made me keep Ubuntu, Synaptic package manager was without doubt the most important factor that kept me tied to it.
    Although it was just a single installation CD, I could have any application that I would like by just clicking a couple of buttons and a little of research. It was to good to be true, but it was. The initial installation was about 1GB and right now I have about 5GB of my hard drive filled with great applications, upgradeable application and pretty easy uninstallable application. The stuff that sometimes make scream about Linux was gone. My primary language is Spanish, and until now I haven’t had any trouble configurating my keyboard or my apps to display well all the special characters I need.
    What about my fear of loosing contact with the outside world? Well all solved! Almost all of my work is Java based, so I can easily develop in my Linux platform and deploy in any other platform. Another issue to me was the compatibility of the documents I wrote and the documents I received. Certainly OpenOffice did the work in a great manner, but it still had it’s flaws. MAnd suddenly the first betas of OpenOffice appeared and the problem was almost solved. Until now I haven’t had any big problem saving or loading Office documents. I have taken the habit of sending everything in PDF and nobody ever complained. Even I have convinced some people to use OpenOffice and a lot of the kept it. They didn’t even knew it existed, but now they are happy to use it and many are really surprised that it is free.   
    I’m not a gamer so I haven’t had a lot of trouble in that arena. Now I have a little program called Windows that sometimes run in my machine emulated by another great piece of software called qemu. I don’t use it that much, primarily for investigation purposes but if someday I need it…it is in my computer too. I have had some problems with Project documents, but people have learned to send me all of them in an HTML format, and even everybody else have liked this method.
    I can really say that my one year without double booting has been great. I’m know in a full free world, I have forgotten all that situations where I was afraid about opening a new email, every concern about virus is virtually gone, and above all I have the tranquility of have great software working for me and contributing to a community that is really enviable in any sense of the world. If you are, like I was, in the indecision of diving completely in the Linux world, I really urge you to do it. The beginning will be a little hard but after a little while you’ll love it and won’t want to change it again.

One thought on “One year since I left Windows behind…Ubuntu

  1. I too dumped Windows on my computer at home 2 years ago this past week and I haven’t missed it one little bit. Unfortunately, I’m required to use Windows at work, which sucks, since that’s not my call to make, and the more I use it at work, the more I like my Linux box at home.

    For me, five years ago, I was still running Windows 98 on my computer. I was happy with it and really didn’t feel like upgrading to XP, and I thought to myself I’d upgrade eventually. But in late 2002, I was reading a book at Barnes & Noble about Windows XP, and it was there that I learned about the activation system built in to it (not to mention, Vista’s activation system is even more draconian).

    I’m not advocating software piracy or anything, but when I read that XP would need to be reactivated if you upgraded your computer’s hardware (cheaper than a new computer, IMHO), and that didn’t set well with me at all. Now I’d heard about Linux and how stable it was not to mention much cheaper than Windows and often free, but I never started giving it that much thought until that time, and I decided I was going to switch to Linux one of these days.

    Well, I had lost a job I had at the time, and, for lack of a better thing, moved back in with my parents. I had problems finding another job so I went back to school for lack of a better thing with the idea of pursuing a computer degree (this was in 2004). In one of the computer labs, they had computers that were set to dual boot Windows XP or Mandrake Linux 9.2. That was the first time I had ever seen Linux in action, and I liked what I saw. A few weeks later, I got up the courage to set up my computer to dual-boot, although I had problems with it as well as Xandros, which I also tried. But due to the sheer number of distros out there, I wasn’t giving up on my plans to leave Micro$oft in the dust.

    In early 2005, I discovered Mepis, and it was pretty good, but still a bit rough around the edges. I finally found another job in March of that year, and one night after work, I found a copy of Mandrake PowerPack (yes, I just had to give Mandrake another try), and I liked it a lot, and in fact, I had it on my computer until this past summer when its stability issues were ticking me off, and so I changed distros.

    I shopped around quite a bit on distros and settled on the new MEPIS. Everything with MEPIS 6.0 worked like a charm. I had even gotten it to run Rosegarden, a MIDI sequencer and music notation program, which I never was able to get Mandrake or Mandriva to do.

    Sorry to burst your bubble about Ubuntu, but a friend of mine convinced me to give Ubuntu a try, so I did, having wiped off MEPIS. Ubuntu and its variants are pretty good all right — except Ubuntu would freeze up whenever I tried to run Rosegarden, just like Mandrake, so back to MEPIS it was, and I’ve gotten it to do even more things I never thought possible, and IMHO, MEPIS is everything Kubuntu only wishes it was.

    But the point is, I too am a very happy Linux user that doesn’t need Windows for anything whatsoever, and I haven’t had Windows on my computer for over two years now and I haven’t missed it one bit.

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