[OT] Something Newbies Should Know



Read this in the Debian General Forum and thought it may be helpful
to newbies and a good reminder to us old dogs what many of us went
thru' at the start of our Linux adventure.

http://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?t=15294

Posted: 2007-05-24 15:24    Post subject: Something Newbies Should Know

---start---

Something Newbies Should Know

This is just my opinion FWIW, after using Linux for 5 years:

The transition from Windows to Linux is painful, no doubt about it. The
following article, rant, or advice is just an attempt to explain how to
go about it.

Linux, regardless of distro, is hard work, there is no way around it,
you have to bite the bullet. Attempts to circunvent this process will
be met with failure. If you want to use Debian, Slackware, or Gentoo
because you want to impress your pals but you don't want to get your
hands dirty, or if reading is a PITA because you got better things to
do, do not read any further, go back to Vista or buy a Mac at once!

Linux is not for everybody, and there is nothing wrong with that.

Installing, configuring, and administering Linux is like robbing a
bank. Careful planning and studying is a must; it is NOT a bag of
tricks, you cannot improvise and hope it will be ok. Luckily, there are
forums, search engines, mailing list, and IRC channels.

If you attempt to install Linux and something is not working, in most
cases it's your fault. You either did not read the howto explaining how
to install step by step, sometimes it's your hardware, sometimes it's a
bug, but in most cases, its due to the newbie's ignorance and laziness
in not preparing himself for the task.

Fine. Nobody is perfect, nobody was born knowing it all, the newbie
needs help. After all, we all were newbies at one time. But the newbie
has to cooperate by doing his part. He has to read the howtos, follow
the advice given, and try it. If it doesn't work, it's imperative he
comes back and question WHY it doesn't work after explaining what he
DID. If he doesn't explain WHAT he did there is no way to find out,
especially if the error message is not pasted in his question.

This process requires a lot of googling and research.

Nothing is owed to the newbie, if he doesn't do his homework, he
deserves nothing. Attempts to blackmail the forum with statements like:
"if i don't solve this, i'll go back to Windows, or i'll install
another distro" for the most part will be ignored by the majority. The
newbie has to do his homework, or find a distro geared to work "out of
the box", a no-brainer distro a la Windows, with which to cut his teeth
in.

---end---
--
sk8-365
.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Desktop Linux Summit thoughts....
    ... I would rather have one single click to install. ... Better for a new Linux user like me to gradually ease into Linux by way ... to flame a complete newbie to Linux. ... You don't believe in Santa ...
    (alt.os.linux)
  • Re: Second Best Linux?
    ... >> newbie to learn on. ... > problematic install. ... > At any rate, I think no matter what distro a newbie tries, if they stick ... > with it they will find Linux can indeed be a replacement for Windows. ...
    (alt.os.linux.suse)
  • Re: [Full-Disclosure] SNMP Broadcasts
    ... happens to process the HTTP protocol. ... defense here was the forum Mr. Knob chose for his polemic: ... And he did it on the same day some crackpot newbie MCSE moron kept ... which is why it has it's own WKP. ...
    (Full-Disclosure)
  • Re: Blasted Suse Firewall
    ... the linux machine is working correctly. ... > issues, including much security stuff, is not well covered. ... But they won't tell a newbie ... >>to an untrusted network, such as the Internet. ...
    (alt.os.linux.suse)
  • Re: Advice wanted on Laptop Setup
    ... > again to grips with linux and really knuckle down and learn it and use it ... I used Slackware as a newbie. ... Debian has a reputation for being "newbie install" hostile (though I'd ... > But if my laptop setup wont work with linux then i guess i am stuck on MS! ...
    (comp.os.linux.setup)