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	wsjb78 
	
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			Local Shadow Agent #1 
			
		
			
				
			
			
			
				 
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				Evolution of a Linux User
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
		Evolution Of A Linux User 
November 28, 1999 
 
During the past year, the scientists in Humorix's Vast Research Lab Of 
Doom have studied the behavior and attitude of the typical Windows and 
Linux user. They have found that the average Linux user goes through ten 
stages of development from a "Microserf" to an "Enlightened Linux User". 
An eleventh stage, "Getting A Life", has also been observed, but only on 
extremely rare occasions. 
 
The 11 stages of evolution are summarized below.  Note, however, that this 
life cycle is not universal.  Many pundits, Microsoft stock holders, and 
PHBs never advance beyond Stage 0 ("Microserf"). Moreover, many extreme 
Slashdot addicts are stuck between Stages 6 and 7 ("Linux Zealot") and 
never evolve to Stage 9 ("Enlightened Linux User").  And, unfortunately, 
far too many people are unable to leave Stage 8 ("Back to Reality") and 
achieve Geek Self-Actualization due to problems outside of their control. 
 
STAGE 0. MICROSERF 
 
You are the number one member of the Bill Gates fan club.  Your life 
revolves around x86 computers running the latest version of Microsoft 
solutions: Windows, Office, Internet Explorer, Visual Basic, and even Bob. 
You have nothing but hate for those eccentric Mac weenies with their 
click-n-drool interfaces and those stone-age Unix oldtimers with their 
archaic command lines. 
 
You frequently send angry letters to your elected representative about 
Microsoft's "freedom to innovative".  You think lawyers are evil (unless 
they are defending innovative companies like Microsoft). You own an 
autographed copy of a book that was ghostwritten by Bill Gates.  Your 
blood boils when somebody forwards you a so-called Microsoft "joke" by 
email. 
 
In short, you are a Microserf. 
 
STAGE 1. FEAR, UNCERTAINTY, DOUBT... ABOUT MICROSOFT 
 
Your world-view begins to sour as you encounter a growing number of 
annoyances with Microsoft products.  The number of Blue Screens increases, 
however you ascribe the problem (at first) to conflicts with poorly 
written drivers that came with your peripherals.  Icons keep jumping 
around the desktop unpredicatably.  You spend 30 minutes one day idly 
searching for an obscure configuration option in the Control Panel. 
 
Slowly but surely, you begin to have doubts about the quality of Microsoft 
software.  Then, the Microsoft Network, to which you have dutifully 
subscribed since 1995, begins to double bill your credit card.  You 
attempt to rectify the problem, but are stymied by the burgeoning 
bureaucracy of Microsoft's Customer Support Department.  Fear sets in... 
will you get your money back? 
 
Meanwhile, something called "Linux" appears on the fringe of your radar. 
You immediately dismiss the idea of a viable and quality Microsoft 
alternative (Linux is Unix-based and therefore must suck, you conclude). 
Nevertheless, you wish something could be done for some of the annoyances 
in Windows.  But you do nothing about it. 
 
STAGE 2. FEAR, UNCERTAINTY, DOUBT... ABOUT LINUX 
 
You keep hearing about this Linux thing, and Open Source, and Apache, and 
FreeBSD as well.  One of your friends installs Linux and says, "It's cool, 
dude!" You discover that the selection of Windows books at your local 
bookstore has remained constant while the Linux and Unix books are 
multiplying like rabbits. You argue, "Well, this just means Linux sucks... 
if there was such a large demand for it, there wouldn't be many books on 
shelves." 
 
Nevertheless, as time wears on and Windows becomes more fragile, the 
temptation to give Linux a try becomes more and more irresistable. While 
at your local SuperMegaOfficeSupplyStore, you pick up a boxed version of 
Red Hat on impulse. 
 
With much hubris, you completely ignore the documentation and attempt to 
install the OS by the seat of your pants.  The installation is a failure; 
Linux simply cannot work with the WinModem, WinSoundCard, 
WinIDEController, WinPrinter, WinMonitor, and WinDRAM that came with your 
"Windows 98 Ready" machine from CompUSSR.  You don't realize this however, 
since you didn't read the FAQs and HOWTOs.  You immediately blame the 
problems on Linux and give up.  You ditch your Red Hat copy by selling it 
on eBay. 
 
After the installation fiasco, you leave fearful, uncertain, and doubtful 
about this "alternative" operating system.  Windows may have its problems, 
but Microsoft will fix them in the next upgrade, you reckon. 
 
STAGE 3. BORN-AGAIN MICROSERF 
 
"Linux sucks" is your new attitude towards life.  Windows, all things 
considered, ain't so bad.  You resolve to become a better Microsoft 
customer by participating in the Microsoft Developer Network and the Site 
Builder Network.  You buy a bunch of "study guides" to pass the MCSE 
examination. 
 
You launch a Windows advocacy site on some dinky free webpage provider, 
utilizing the latest innovations in VBScript, ActiveX, and other 
IE-specific features.  Instead of lurking, you now actively participate 
in Linux and Macintosh bashing on various Usenet groups.  Upon discovering 
Slashdot for the first time, you assume the role of the Bastard Anonymous 
Coward From Hell by posting countless flamebait posts about how cool 
Microsoft is and how much "Linsux" (as you call it) is a crappy OS. 
 
You proudly wear an "All Hail Chairman Bill" T-shirt and display numerous 
pro-Microsoft bumper stickers ("Honk if you hate anti-trust laws") on your 
car.  You never leave home without your Windows CE-based palmtop computer. 
You make a pilgrimage to Redmond to marvel at the glory that is the 
Microsoft Campus. 
 
STAGE 4. DISGRUNTLED USER 
 
Your Microserf ways come to an abrupt end when everything goes wrong. You 
lose a vital work-related document to a Windows crash.  You lose your job 
as an indirect result.  You find that applying for jobs is difficult... 
everyone wants your resume in the latest version of Word, but you have an 
older version that has an incompatible file format. 
 
You waste more and more time tinkering with Windows and other Microsoft 
programs to keep them in working order.  You encounter serious problems 
with Windows, but your calls to technical support only yield the dreaded 
response, "re-install the OS". 
 
After much grief you finally land another job at a software company, only 
to find out a month later that Microsoft has announced a competing product 
to be "integrated" with the next version of Windows.  You soon lose your 
job. 
 
You can't take it much longer.  You are now an official Disgruntled User, 
and are ready for a way to escape from the depths of Microsoft Hell.  You 
are ready for anything at all... even a primitive, archaic, 
hard-to-install, grief-laden alternative like Linux. 
 
STAGE 5. A RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE 
 
You resolve to install Linux now, for real.  Your friends say "It's about 
time", and tell you to RTFM this time.  After losing yourself in the 
documentation for several days, you figure out why your previous encounter 
with Linux was a disaster: you need real hardware, not WinCrap. 
 
With a new computer at your desk, and a Red Hat CD-ROM in hand, you embark 
on a voyage of discovery to the land of Linux.  Your life is changed 
forever; words cannot describe the rush you feel when you first log in as 
"root" after the successful installation.  You stare blankly at the screen 
in awe; you are unable to utter a word, unable to think of anything else 
except "HOLY SHIT THIS IS SO DAMN COOL!!!!" 
 
You spend hours, and then days, exploring the depths of the Linux system: 
a filesystem layout that actually makes sense (no "My Documents" crap), 
a command line so powerful it makes MS-DOS look like the Stone Age 
technology that it is... and best of all, no Blue Screen! 
 
"Why have I wasted my life with Microsoft?  I'm never going back!" you 
exclaim wildly.  You have thrown off the yoke of Redmond Oppression. 
 
STAGE 6. LINUX CONVERT 
 
You still keep a copy of Windows around, but you find yourself booting 
into Linux more and more.  The meager amount of diskspace you set aside 
for your first Linux install dwindles; you decide to buy a second hard 
drive exclusively for Linux. 
 
You re-install everything, including the kitchen sink (Emacs).  Once you 
finally get PPP working (it was a nasty challenge, but you're so enamored 
with Linux that you hardly notice), you go on a Freshmeat Binge: 
downloading and installing every piece of Free Software you come across. 
 
STAGE 7. LINUX ZEALOT 
 
Your enthusiasm for Linux is unbounded.  You do anything and everything 
to advocate Linux and spite your old master, Microsoft.  Usenet, Slashdot, 
and LinuxToday are your hangouts.  You have a strong opinion about the 
GNU GPL and you're not afraid to share it. 
 
Linux World Domination is your new life's ambition; you put career, 
wealth, and dating on the back burner.  You participate in flamefests 
against those braindead Windows lusers (stuck in Stage 3) that inhabit 
Usenet and ZDNet.  You purchase all kinds of tacky made-in-Taiwan Linux 
merchandise (T-shirt, mouse pads, stuffed penguins, etc.) to show your 
support. 
 
You rearrange books in a bookstore so that the Linux tomes are displayed 
more prominently.  You get in trouble with your boss because you spend 
all your time surfing Slashdot at work.  You  petition your local 
government to migrate their computer systems to free software.  You move 
to another residence just so you can say you live on Apache Street. 
 
Instead of a novel, you read the Linux kernel source for pleasure.   You 
establish your own regional Linux User Group in the hope that you can 
invite a guest speaker in the future and get their autograph.  You learn 
Perl with the goal of automating common tasks, but you spend more time 
tinkering with "just one more perl script" than actually getting stuff 
done. 
 
STAGE 8. BACK TO REALITY 
 
Your zealotry subsides as you are forced to re-enter the Real World. Your 
boss demands that you submit documents in the latest Word format, nothing 
else will do.  Some of your favorite websites become harder to use because 
they keep incorporating features enhanced for Windows and IE.  The new 
peripherals you bought from BigEvilProprietaryCo don't work with Linux 
and probably never will. 
 
Your ISP is acquired by another company, a very Microsoft-friendly 
company, to be exact.  They "upgrade" the system; however, the only change 
you can notice is that Linux and PPP no longer work without extensive 
hacking.  Then, citing "customer-driven demand", your ISP makes more 
"enhancements", and Linux no longer works at all.  Calling their tech 
support is an exercise in futility, they simply say, "Linux?  What is 
that?  Whatever it is we don't support it, and never will.  Go use Windows 
like everybody else." 
 
Reality sets in: you are forced to use Windows more and more.   Your blood 
pressure rises, you have more headaches, you waste hours and hours due to 
Windows "issues", but you have no choice. 
 
STAGE 9. ENLIGHTENED LINUX USER 
 
Then you have an inspiration: you do have a choice, you can hack your own 
drivers for your hardware, you can find another ISP, you can get another 
job.  Everything comes into focus, you have become a Linux Guru. 
 
You kludge together drivers for your "Windows-compatible" hardware.  You 
finally (after much searching) locate a local ISP that's actually run by 
competent geeks, not MCSEs and PHBs. You find a new, better job at a 
Linux-friendly company. 
 
In your spare time, you work on various Open Source projects. You build 
up a reputation and receive "The Letter" to participate in the IPO of a 
Linux business.  You join the bandwagon and create your own Linux portal 
website. 
 
You're at the pinnacle of evolution for a Linux user.  With much joy, you 
become 100% Microsoft free.  You ditch your Windows partition and burn 
all of the Windows disks and manuals that you own. 
 
STAGE 10. GET A LIFE 
 
You become bored with Linux, and computers in general.  You're still a 
hardcore geek, of course, but you wonder if there isn't something better 
you could be doing.  You've been told to "get a life" countless times 
during your existence on Earth, but now you wonder if maybe you should 
have heeded that advice. 
 
Unexpectedly, a media conglomerate (i.e. Andover, Ziff-Davis, 
Internet.com, etc.) offers to buy your Linux portal website and domain 
name for an obscene price that contains a significant number of digits. 
Without hesistation you accept; this windfall, combined with your earnings 
from Linux stocks, is enough to retire on. 
 
And that's exactly what you do.  You move off to a small tropical island, 
and get a life. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
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