diff --git a/docs.mdwn b/docs.mdwn new file mode 100644 index 00000000..ed7fab5e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs.mdwn @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +[[!meta title="Documentations"]] + +[[!inline pages="docs/*" archive="yes" show=0]] diff --git a/docs/foss.mdwn b/docs/foss.mdwn new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4950b64e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/foss.mdwn @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +[[!meta title="Free and Open Source Software (FOSS)"]] + +[[Nico Schottelius|about]], the author of this website, is a FOSS developer.

+

How did he become a FOSS developer?

+

In 1998 he was running Windows 95 on his brand new computer (Pentium +1, 166Mhz) and it randomly crashed. This was very frustrating. So he +asked his father, whether there is something else. And his father gave +him a set of SCO Unixware floppys and cds and a packet labeled "Suse +Linux 11/94". The SCO package had a blue/white cd box and looked nicer, +so he began to try to install it to his computer. But it did not work, +because SCO did not support IDE disks and the computer had an IDE disk +builtin.

+

After about two weeks trying around with SCO, he gave up. Frustrated he continued to use the old operating system.

+

About one week later he was again extremly frustrated, that this +operating system was crashing so often and he remembered, that there +was another cd set (one source code, one install cd) to try out. After +about 4 hours he had Linux running. That was really really easy +compared to SCO. It felt strange, so new, so fast. And it contains only +text. Strange, like DOS before Windos, he thought.

+

On the next day he read in the book that there is something called +"X11" available, which can destroy the display, when wrongly +configured. He was shocked, but still tried to do it the correct. He +searched for vertical and horizontal refresh rates and found them after +some hours searching in the handbook (they were labeled differently +compared to the SuSE Linux handbook). Created the configuration and +typed in "X<enter>". Wow, it works. But why is it grey and black? +Really gross. But after typing 'startx' it looked much better.

+

The next confusing thing was that there were no drivers for the +cdrom. Nothing to load. After about two weeks he found out that they +are already integrated into the kernel and that one simply needs to +"mount" them. And after that experience, he was totally convinced by +FOSS, because the FOSS people solved the driver issue much cleaner than +the cdrom vendor or Windos itself. The whole system has been running +very stable and it has been really easy to change things (like +/etc/issues), it has been open.

diff --git a/sidebar.mdwn b/sidebar.mdwn index 49f17173..09c368fd 100644 --- a/sidebar.mdwn +++ b/sidebar.mdwn @@ -1,9 +1,10 @@ [[!meta robots="noindex, follow"]] -* [[/root|Index]] +* [[Index]] * Global * [[About|about]] - * [[Documentation|doc]] + * [[Documentation|docs]] * [[News(blog)|blog]] * Lokal * [[Neuigkeiten|notizbuch]] +* [[Seitenübersicht / Sitemap|sitemap]]