this post was submitted on 27 May 2025
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    [–] GamingChairModel@lemmy.world 40 points 3 days ago (1 children)

    Getting a smartphone in 2010 was what gave me the confidence to switch to Arch Linux, knowing I could always look things up on the wiki as necessary.

    I also think my first computer that could boot from USB was the one I bought in 2011, too. Everything before that I had to physically burn a CD.

    [–] AugustWest@lemm.ee 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (2 children)

    In 2010 it was the smartphone? Not the dozen older computers, misc laptops, or even maybe a tablet lying around?

    The sharp zaurus sl5500 with full color and useful in daylight screen was all the way back in 2004 for example.

    Or the Asus Eepc in 2007 and it came with Linux!

    I would have thought everyone would have access to a cheap fallback computer by then.

    [–] irmoz@lemmy.world 4 points 3 days ago (1 children)

    Yeah I'm assuming they didn't have any of those handy if getting a phone was what made it possible

    [–] AugustWest@lemm.ee 1 points 3 days ago

    Yeah. It just is really surprising the phone came first that late in computer history

    [–] GamingChairModel@lemmy.world 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

    I can't tell if you were rich, or just not the right age to appreciate that it wasn't exactly common for a young adult, fresh out of college, to have spare computers laying around (much less the budget to spare on getting a $300-500 secondary device for browsing the internet). If I upgraded computers, I sold the old one used if it was working, or for parts of it wasn't. I definitely wasn't packing up secondary computers to bring with me when I moved cities for a new job.

    Yes, I had access to a work computer at the office, but it would've been weird to try to bring in my own computer to try to work on it after hours, while trying to use the Internet from my cubicle for personal stuff.

    I could've asked a roommate to borrow their computer or to look stuff up for me, but that, like going to the office or a library to use that internet, would've been a lot more friction than I was willing to put up with, for a side project at home.

    And so it's not that I think it's weird to have a secondary internet-connected device before 2010. It's that I think it's weird to not understand that not everyone else did.

    [–] AugustWest@lemm.ee 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

    If you were moving around sure. But most kids I knew by that age had something.... anything. A used one for free by that point, maybe $50 at most if you paid.

    It was the juxtaposition of dirt cheap computers, being able to even afford a smartphone, AND taking a shot at installing a new OS. Usually that path was a little bit of geekery beforehand maybe ability to coble together a computer or grab a second hand laptop. If that wasn't you, thats cool.

    [–] GamingChairModel@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

    taking a shot at installing a new OS

    To be clear, I had been on Ubuntu for about 4 years by then, having switched when 6.06 LTS had come out. And several years before that, I had previously installed Windows Me, XP beta, and the first official XP release on a home-built, my first computer that was actually mine, using student loan money paid out because my degree program required all students have their own computer.

    But freedom to tinker on software was by no means the flexibility to acquire spare hardware. Computers were really expensive in the 90's and still pretty expensive in the 2000's. Especially laptops, in a time when color LCD technology was still pretty new.

    That's why I assumed you were a different age from me, either old enough to have been tinkering with computers long enough to have spare parts, or young enough to still live with middle class parents who had computers and Internet at home.

    [–] AugustWest@lemm.ee 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

    I think you might be forgetting just how much e-waste was going on leading up to 2010. All the way back in 2003 I was using recycled computers for my Linux servers. Windows XP came out in 2001 and by about 2005 the number of Win98 machines being dumped was pretty high.

    So I looked it up using the way back machine. I saw a flyer for my local computer store. You could buy a basic but complete computer NEW for under $200 in 2010. You also could spend thousands of course but you didn't have to. You could get a netbook new for $150.

    So I went to some liquidation and used computer sites and old newspapers in 2010. A dell optiplex p4 at 2.4 ghz complete with 90 days warranty: $60. And it seems used is about $50 to $100 in general. Laptops a slight premium. And those are the ones people tried to get money back from. Lots of them were just FREE. The number of garage sale listings in the newspapers offering free computers is crazy.

    And I mention all of that because Linux was how you took an old win 98 machine and turned it into a functioning web host, or email server, or NAS, or whatever back in those days.

    And by the way, I think I paid $25 for my sharp zaurus used in 2005. It was so cool to have an internet handheld with color that you could use in full sunlight and ran linux.

    Edit: I hope you see this! If you lived in Fayette county (GA) in 2010, you could get a Dell Optiplex GX280 P4 at 2.8 ghz complete computer, monitor, mouse, keyboard for $65, with free shipping. That should tell you something right there.