Debian 8 for Beginners
By Ed Hurst
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About this ebook
This book is aimed at the great average middle of computer users, proficient but by no means a technician. You are not stuck with Windows or Mac. You don’t have to surrender to the profit-driven upgrade cycle. You can still use your computer and keep it secure and gain a measure of control you could not otherwise have. The answer is replacing Windows with Linux (it runs on Macs, too). It’s quite possible the average computer user can learn to install and run Debian with at least as much savvy as you ran Windows. You don’t have to become a computer technician to understand it; it’s not that hard. This book covers installing Debian 8 (Jessie).
Ed Hurst
Born 18 September 1956 in Seminole, OK. Traveled a great deal in Europe with the US Army, worked a series of odd jobs, and finally in public education. Ordained to the ministry as a Baptist, then with a non-denominational endorsement. Currently semi-retired.
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Debian 8 for Beginners - Ed Hurst
Debian 8 for Beginners
By Ed Hurst
Smashwords Edition
Copyright 2015 by Ed Hurst
Copyright notice: People of honor need no copyright laws; they are only too happy to give credit where credit is due. Others will ignore copyright laws whenever they please. If you are of the latter, please note what Moses said about dishonorable behavior – be sure your sin will find you out
(Numbers 32:23)
Permission is granted to copy, reproduce and distribute for non-commercial reasons, provided the book remains in its original form.
Cover Art: Paste up of Open Source and Public Domain art, created by the author using GIMP on a Debian computer. Background image is Public Domain (source). Debian art logo is licensed under Creative Commons 3.0; source. Cover art falls under CC 3.0 and is freely available upon request in several electronic formats, including a version without the text.
Other books by this author include CentOS: The Commercial Grade Linux Desktop and The Shortest Path to Linux.
Debian 8 for Beginners
This book is an update from the previous version, titled Debian: Try It, You’ll Like It
Introduction
0: Why Debian Linux
1: Installation
2: The XFCE Desktop
3: Everything’s a File
4: Brotherhood of the Commandline
5: Safe Surfing
6: More Safe Surfing
7: ATI and NVIDIA Drivers
8: Another Browser
9: Multimedia
10: Final Considerations
Introduction
This book is aimed at the great average middle of computer users, proficient but by no means a technician.
There are billions of computers in this world and it seems most of humanity has encountered at least one. They have become nearly ubiquitous and virtually necessary for much of what humans do. We can expect them to become even more important in the near future. When operating on this scale, we can’t avoid thinking in broad generalities.
Most computers run some version of Windows, the operating system developed by Microsoft. They are easily one of the most powerful commercial influences on the earth. Nothing here is meant to imply Microsoft is particularly evil, but they don’t necessarily operate in your best interests. We also do not suggest Windows is inferior, but the priorities for its design do not put the user first. With Microsoft, the software is not the product. You as the user are the product delivered to their corporate partners for marketing and other forms of manipulation for profit. System security is a priority, but that unfortunately means also secure against your prying into the technology. They certain do not give you maximum control over the system. Microsoft secures Windows against attacks on their profit margin. That is how it works with commercial software.
In the minds of most people, Apple is the second biggest, but they supply both the hardware and the operating system together. It’s different in many ways from Windows; it is advertised differently and sold to a different audience. It’s by far the most expensive option. Their attempts to control and constrain the user are even tighter than you experience with Microsoft, though it is easier to poke around in the innards if you first learn about Unix, from whence it was born.
And then there’s everything else. Most likely you’ve at least heard of something called Linux. In terms of numerical presence, it’s easily far back in third place. It belongs to a much larger type of software development called Open Source. The underlying code is wide open to anyone interested and able to participate in writing it. Anyone can change it to suit himself. Granted, when you take away the profit motive, what’s left is not necessarily any friendlier to the common user who can’t understand the code, much less write his own. Most Open Source developers are in it for themselves, in that sense. They are scratching their own personal itch for the most part, and you may not like the results. Fortunately, a large number of developers do take some interest in the user’s experience and make room for some of the more common options users like to see.
So maybe you are stuck with some aging Windows XP machine, which hasn’t been supported with security updates in at least a year. But the hardware still works fine. Can you afford a new machine? Can you afford the next new version of Windows? Could your machine run it if you bought it?
You are not stuck with that. You don’t have to surrender to the profit-driven upgrade cycle. You can still use your computer and keep it secure and gain a measure of control you could not otherwise have. The answer is replacing Windows with Linux; it also runs on Macs, so you can keep using the Apple hardware that no longer runs the current version. It’s quite possible the average computer user can learn to install and run Debian with at least as much savvy as you ran Windows. You don’t have to become a computer technician to understand it; it’s not that hard.
This whole book was written on a Debian computer.
0: Why Debian Linux
Starting the chapter count with zero is sort of an inside joke for computer geeks, particularly among those involved in Linux. A typical list of things starts with zero. It’s a metaphor for starting with a clean slate and getting it right, taking control of the results. Switching to Linux doesn’t merely put you in charge of things; it grants a sense of power you won’t easily get from Windows or Mac. But it’s really about the people involved and the computer subculture of DIY.
The primary reason Linux computers seldom get viruses is the Linux user culture. There is a powerful sense of taking computer security seriously. Just the introductory readings for guidance in migrating computers to Linux will teach you constructive paranoia. You won’t get this from Windows users unless you go looking for it, but in