this post was submitted on 04 May 2025
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[–] darkpanda 60 points 3 days ago (10 children)

Back in the day when installing Solaris and OpenBSD and such you had to specify in numerical values the number of sectors of hard disk space you wanted to format drives with. Shit is considerably easier now with modern UNIXy systems.

[–] [email protected] 24 points 3 days ago (9 children)

Back in what day? My first Linux was in the early 2000s, and even back then it wasn't any more complicated than a Windows install.

[–] darkpanda 12 points 3 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

The mid 1990s for me, OpenBSD came out in 1996 and Solaris was Solaris was like 1992. I was admining a Solaris SPARC station back around 1997 that had a gnarly install if I remember correctly. It was on 3.5” floppies and I still have that SPARC station and the original Solaris OS sitting in the basement collecting dust. At one point that SPARC was being used by some of us working with the PHP group to diagnose file system limits on Solaris and build PHP binaries back when I was involved in PHP development. Fun times.

My first Linux install was like Red Hat 5.2 or something and it was much nicer.

[–] KingPorkChop 2 points 2 days ago

Oh man. I remember Solaris. I tried to install that on something and never got it running.

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