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[LUG]Introducing New Member

 

Hello Members of Devon and Cornwall Gnu/Linux User Group.

I am writing this post as a brief introduction to myself, for the group.

I am a retired research scientist living in Plympton St Maurice. I
first learnt to program computers using ALGOL in the 1960s, at Hatfield
Polytechnic. I went on to use various mainfame computers, mostly ICL
Prime series running PRIMOS. I went on to tinker with various
microcomputers such as Z80 based machines running CP/M, BBC Micro, and
Acorn Archimedes. In the 1980s I had wanted to buy an Acorn Archimedes,
but couldn't afford it at the time, and so bought a second hand Canon
AS100 running CP/M-86. That computer had a truly massive hard disk
drive in its own cabinet, the size of a modern PC tower case, and had a
capacity of a whopping great 5MB!

At this time, in the 1980s, I switched from using mainframes to using
Unix workstations including those from IBM, Silicon Graphics, and Sun
SparcStation. I worked on several projects including the design of
equipment used for calibrating Earth Observation satellites, and did
some early research developing mathematical techniques for machine
vision and machine learning. In those days, we had to build the digital
cameras ourselves. And email had to be manually routed!

In the mid 1990s I had started designing myself a simple Unix
workstation built from computer scrap I saved from the laboratory skip,
to run the Minix cut down version of Unix. I then discoved that a young
man called Linus Torvalds in Finland had been doing the same, but had
given up with the awful Minix system, and designed his own Linux. I
experimented with shoehorning the first distributions of Yggdrazil and
Slackware onto my Frankenstein's monster of a scrap-built computer, but
fortunately then discovered the Debian version 1, which was a lot
better put together, and just needed me to adapt a few drivers to work
with the computer I had built from an odd assortment of bits and pieces
from things like a Silicon Graphics Iris, and Kontron Analyser, and
other diverse computing objects.

That electrified scrap-heap running Debian Gnu/Linux fast became my
favourite workstation, much to the chagrin of my institue director who
kept telling me he wanted me to use a modern PC running that awful MS
Windows operating system. I resisted that idiot's demands, and have
been using Debian ever since, whilst building myself better and better
workstations out of the much higher quality scrap that the computer
department kept quietly passing my way whenever things broke down on
their system.

To cut a long story short; in 2012 a friend gave me a present of the
new Raspberry Pi model B (the original one with the short gpio). I
loved that Raspberry Pi at first sight. It reminded me of the simple
elegance of the Acorn Archimedes I had once wanted. And it even used
Debian Gnu/Linux as its official operating system, and had the option
of using it with the RISCOS operating system like with the Acorn
Archimedes. I still have that original Model B, which I intend to use
next year to teach myself ARM Assembly, because over the best part of
the last sixty years, I've used nearly 40 different programming
languages, and think it is time I added ARM Assembly to the list.

Currently I am using a Raspberry Pi 4B as my workstation, and am
looking forward to getting a 5B next year. My RPI 4B is the most
powerful computer I have ever used, and is also the most fun to use.
The 5B is very much better, so I will be in clover next year!

Lots of love,
Helen McCall
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