I love being a geek and I've never made any secret of that, but this time I'm going to spare you a comic book or superhero related rant - it's good old fashioned computer geek time.
It has to be said I'm certainly not going to win any prizes for coding some new game or smartphone app, but I do love that I can do enough to make myself smile with geeky pride and that's all thanks to a short time living with someone who knows a hell of a lot more than I do.
Only a handful of years ago the extent of my computer geekery was playing a few games, untold hours of playing with an art program on an old Commodore Amiga 500+ and whatever remnants of COMAL coding i'd learned in high school on computers as old as time itself. Then I met geoff (not a typo, he had the capital letter revoked in 2007 - it's a long story so perhaps I'll temporarily reinstate it for the purpose of this blog) and all that changed.
Geoff was one of my flatmates when I temporarily lived in Edinburgh during my final year of university and apart from hours of geeky conversations about Doctor Who, scientific theories and playing so many hours of video games - one of the things I learned from Geoff was about the existence of Linux.
I had come across Linux before this and even used a few in my life but hadn't realised what they were as they were on computers in youth hostels in San Francisco where out of ignorance I had just assumed the different computers were "an american thing".
Geoff spent I don't know how many hours showing me how it worked, explaining things and getting excited showing off the latest customisation he'd learned how to install on his computer and I quickly got very excited about it and despite having a brand new laptop I soon got my hands on some old computer parts on freecycle and learned how to build a computer and just how good a system could be made with old parts if it was running Linux. From that moment on I was a little bit hooked, however, I always went back to my laptop as it was just so much more convenient especially since I didn't like the Linux version of Photoshop. I also had the problem of no longer living with an in house tech guru for when I got stuck with a system I wasn't very familiar with still.
Fast forwarding to this week I got the opportunity to get some more free computer parts from an internet cafe which had new owners and had decided to renovate and replace all the computers. The computers are old and had more dust inside them than my vacuum cleaner when its due to be emptied but I was able to salvage some good parts and have just built myself another Linux system to practice on.
So for the first time ever I've been experimenting and modifying with the Linux installation and making it look and act like the kind of system that Geoff had and ran all those years ago and whilst I don't have an in house tech guru any more, I do have an entire world full of Linux geeks at my disposal through the wonder of YouTube. I might not be as fast as Geoff was with the coding or even know what I'm doing half the time but thanks to what he taught me all those years ago I'm not scared of experimenting with it because if it goes wrong I can just start again - and he must have been doing something right, he's now got his own business providing the services of the humble computer geek to the "normal" folk of the world.
I know he's going to read this at some point, so I'm going to take this moment to say a huge thank you to him. Not only did he teach me things I didn't know the first thing about, he showed me friendship and support when I needed it most.
You are a good friend Geoff and my life is better for knowing you, thank you for everything.
Geoff's Blog
http://artificialphilosophy.blogspot.co.uk/
Geoff's Business
http://www.webdesignhighlands.co.uk/
1 comment:
You're very welcome :)
When are you coming up to visit anyway?!
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