75-year old Ubuntu User Learns From Books
Who Reads Books? Wise People, That's Who!

Emery Fletcher
Friday, May 22, 2009 11:32:09 AM
'Editor's note: in a recent
article about Ubuntu, Linux guru Carla Schroder -- author of the Linux Cookbook -- noted that she had
never met anyone who bought a "how to" book for their PC - though she recommended it. A
Datamation reader wrote to respond.'
Dear Ms. Schroder,
In your article
Linux for Newbies, you wondered who actually buys and uses computer books. Well, I
do, and I'd be in bad shape without them!I don't fit the profile of Incipient Geek. I'm
75 years old, and the last time I had more to do with a computer than emailing and
surfing was in 1960, when I had to write some Fortran programs as a grad student.
About a year ago I read something about Linux by an author who had a fine and
sophisticated sense of humor, and it occurred to me that if someone like that was a
proponent of Linux, there must be something interesting about it that I might like.
I started - as any former academic would - with books:
Ubuntu For Dummies (Paul Sery),
Introducing Ubuntu (Brian Proffitt),
Beginning Ubuntu Linux (Keir Thomas). I ran a couple of the live CD's, which showed
me an interesting new desktop, but of course they ran VERY slowly on my little old
Compaq.
I also looked into some of the Help forums, but the endless accounts of unexpected
crash and burn from people who seemed to know computers far better than I totally
discouraged any notion I might have had of dual booting Linux with Windows on my only
computer. You see, the forums are to offer help, so they are all about problems that can
occur.
A few weeks ago a relative offered me an old eMachines with no operating system on it
(she had had it professionally "wiped," she said). I had no idea how - or even whether -
a computer in such a condition could be reanimated, but I cheerfully accepted the gift. I
figured that even the dumbest things I did on that box could leave me no worse off than
when I started.
First I armed myself with what looked to me like the most authoritative book on the
subject:
A Practical Guide to Ubuntu Linux, by Mark Sobell. I was blissfully unaware it was
intended for folks setting up and administrating servers, but it certainly went right to
the nitty-gritty of Ubuntu for somewhat over 1,000 pages.
I was pleased to see that the machine woke up and ran a live CD of Ubuntu 8.10, so I
tried the installation. It went smoothly for a while, but suddenly the screen went blank.
I didn't know that was just because the disk wasn't saying anything to the monitor at the
time, so I panicked and did a hard stop. (Shows you how clueless I am about this
stuff!)
I was about to conclude the whole thing was far beyond my abilities, but since the
machine had cost me nothing, I decided to try again.
It worked! Eventually (the box has only 384MB available memory) I had an operating
system up and running! I played with it for a while, trying to decide on a type font that
was small enough to get decent word count per page yet was easy on my elderly eyes. I
tried to reset the screen resolution and - pow - diagonal lines, no response from mouse
or keyboard, another hard stop.
I figured I must have created some problem when I aborted the first installation. On
the second install, the ubiquity partitioner had indicated there was a 5.4GB partition
already on the drive and it put the new version in the remaining space.
Could that have created problems? I decided to take my life in my hands and do a text
mode install (me, the ultimate non-geek!), setting up my own idea of what partitions
should look like.
I read Mr. Sobell's instructions for doing that (read them at least 8 or 9 times!),
took a deep breath, and went at it. WOW! In a lot less time than the other attempts had
taken, I had a solid Ubuntu 8.10 desktop up and running with two primary partitions (/
and /home) and a great big extended partition where swap and /usr now live and there's
room for lots more company.
My point is this: a book is a more reliable source of answers than a forum or a Help
icon - a book doesn't go black unexpectedly, it doesn't time-out a session, it doesn't
flame you as a clueless newbie when you ask a dumb question, and above all, the best of
them give you a "why" to do something as well as a "what". An old gaffer like me wouldn't
stand a chance of gaining any geek creds without BOOKS!
Emery
Article courtesy of Datamation