Very few laptops come with any GNU / Linux distribution installed. Unfortunately, it's extremely unlikely that you will have exposure to anything but Microsoft software during your school years. Although the number of people using GNU / Linux is large and growing, we're still a heavily diluted minority.
So the question is, how did you find Kubuntu? I've often wondered how so many people came to be here.
My own path started with a group project at university (I studied Civil Engineering). I was complaining about the absolute nightmare that is combining 5 different Microsoft Word documents into one seamless volume. A friend who was doing Computer Science overheard, and suggested LaTeX as being brilliant for large projects due to its ability to place images in "floats", eliminating the need to re-shuffle 100s of pages after adding a paragraph somewhere earlier in the document. It was too late to use LaTeX for that project, but I tried it out and didn't go back - every piece of coursework I submitted since that day looked a lot more professional.
Researching LaTeX had led me to discover it was "free software". Whatever this "free software" stuff was, I thought, it was great and I wanted more. In addition to this, LaTeX is installed on Windows using MiKTeX, which requires a download of several GB. Something I read told me that when LaTeX is installed on Linux or MacOS it requires a much smaller download, since many of the files required are already on the system.
So...I looked up Linux, and saw that it was good.
I tried Linux Mint (Cinnamon, I think), but got frustrated by being directed to guides for Ubuntu. So I tried Ubuntu, but didn't like Unity... which is when I tried Kubuntu. It stuck
My one regret is that I didn't make the switch sooner - apparently there's free printing in the Linux lab at The University of Surrey
Would love to hear your stories!
Feathers
So the question is, how did you find Kubuntu? I've often wondered how so many people came to be here.
My own path started with a group project at university (I studied Civil Engineering). I was complaining about the absolute nightmare that is combining 5 different Microsoft Word documents into one seamless volume. A friend who was doing Computer Science overheard, and suggested LaTeX as being brilliant for large projects due to its ability to place images in "floats", eliminating the need to re-shuffle 100s of pages after adding a paragraph somewhere earlier in the document. It was too late to use LaTeX for that project, but I tried it out and didn't go back - every piece of coursework I submitted since that day looked a lot more professional.
Researching LaTeX had led me to discover it was "free software". Whatever this "free software" stuff was, I thought, it was great and I wanted more. In addition to this, LaTeX is installed on Windows using MiKTeX, which requires a download of several GB. Something I read told me that when LaTeX is installed on Linux or MacOS it requires a much smaller download, since many of the files required are already on the system.
So...I looked up Linux, and saw that it was good.
I tried Linux Mint (Cinnamon, I think), but got frustrated by being directed to guides for Ubuntu. So I tried Ubuntu, but didn't like Unity... which is when I tried Kubuntu. It stuck
My one regret is that I didn't make the switch sooner - apparently there's free printing in the Linux lab at The University of Surrey
Would love to hear your stories!
Feathers
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