<div dir="ltr">Hello!<div><br></div><div>My name is Fred and I've been stalking this mailing list for about three weeks now and I thought it was time to come to the surface. </div><div><br></div><div>I'm a new Linux user. I installed Mint 17 Cinnamon back in June and I've been loving it. I started with Ubuntu but there was too much weirdness in Unity for my tastes. It was suggested on the Ars Technica boards (I'm a moderator over there) that coming from Windows that I might find the transition easier with Mint and they were right. Currently I'm dual-booting Mint with Windows 8.1 but I spend most of my time in Mint unless I'm playing a game.</div>
<div><br></div><div>I've flirted with Linux in the past but always seemed to get frustrated with all the hurdles I seemed to run into with getting it all configured. One of the reasons I love Mint so much is that it figured out my hardware configuration on its own (including my printer!), not to mention making it easy to install the nvidia drivers I needed. Not having to do any basic configuration made it easy for me to explore the things I wanted to check out on my own.<br>
</div><div><br></div><div>In reading up on my new OS one of the things that kept coming up was to check out the local user groups. I found PLUG with a Google search and signed up for the mailing lists that seemed pertinent. I hope to make it to one of your meetings sometime but I work nights so it may be a while before I'm able to do that. In the meantime I'm enjoying reading the emails produced by the lists. I read them all even though most of the stuff is way over my head but it's a good learning experience and sometimes there's conversations I actually do understand!</div>
<div><br></div><div>I decided on some goals for my new Linux journey. In the near term I want to learn the command line and <a href="http://vi.vi">vi.vi</a> seems an odd text editor to me but I'm enjoying the challenge of learning it. The command line is awesomely powerful and I'm having fun with it too. I got a couple of books from Amazon that were highly rated to help me out. The first is <i>The Linux Command Line: A Complete Introduction </i>by William E. Shotts and the second is <i>Learning vi and the Vim Editors </i>by Arnold Robbins, Elbert Hannah, and Linda Lamb. Once I get through these I want to install a more complicated distro (to me) like Arch or Gentoo. The ultimate goal is to do Linux from Scratch but there's a lot of learning for me before I get to that.</div>
<div><br></div><div>Anyway, thanks for being here and sharing your knowledge about all the 'nixes. </div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>Fred Fifield</div></div>