For those veteran linux people, what was it like back in 90s? I did see and hear of Unix systems being available for use but I did not see much apart from old versions of Debian in use.

Were they prominent in education like universities? Was it mainly a hobbyist thing at the time compared to the business needs of 98, 95 and classic mac?

I ask this because I found out that some PC games I owned were apparently also on Linux even in CD format from a firm named Loki.

  • @AnUnusualRelic
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    33 days ago

    Modems were easy. Stick the serial cable in. Done.

    • @[email protected]
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      93 days ago

      Is was those crappy winmodems that caused all the problems. They cheaped out on hardware, so you basically got a sound card. All of the work had to be done by the driver, which also put a lot of load on your CPU. Serial modems just worked since everything was done in hardware.

      • Quazatron
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        33 days ago

        I had erased that information from my memory. Also it took a long time for Linux to gain USB support, then a long time to get WIFI (also because of the cheap vendors that used windows drivers to do the heavy lifting). Yeah, it was a very uphill struggle, with Microsoft actively pushing against Linux (remember the ‘Linux is a virus’ narrative?) I’m amazed we made it this far.

      • @AnUnusualRelic
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        23 days ago

        Ah, right I’d forgotten about those. Of course they weren’t actually modems. So there’s also that.

    • Shimitar
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      42 days ago

      Well, only “real” modems… Those amazing piece of crap that offloaded hardware to the windows driver where… Questionable.

      And they started appearing around windows 95/98.