I’ve been using Linux for the past 5 years, and recently I change from DE to WM (i3) which change it my whole workflow. Now I use a lot more the command line to do even simple things.
Recently I note that some relatives called me ‘hacker’ and I find that kinda funny, may be because I’m so accustomed to the terminal and to i3 that I don’t notice that “it looks like a hacker thing”.
- Troy ( @troyunrau@lemmy.ca ) 7•5 months ago
Any esoteric computer use to a layman can be misconstrued as hacking. Even hacking. ;)
- PlasticExistence ( @PlasticExistence@beehaw.org ) English5•5 months ago
Yes. Because they don’t have any familiarity with the way Linux desktops look and work, it all looks very much like the technology depicted in movies/shows/games that is very frequently a tool of a “hackerman” type character. That’s even more true when a terminal enters play.
- gnuplusmatt ( @gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com ) 3•5 months ago
my daughter calls my terminal my code, no matter how much I tell her its just prompt for commands
- Oisteink ( @Oisteink@feddit.nl ) 3•5 months ago
I do believe some are - like those doing Linux from scratch without reading while using awk, sed and friends to edit configs
- petrescatraian ( @petrescatraian@libranet.de ) 3•5 months ago
@Xirup generally just weird. They just look at it and see it so familiar yet so weird. However, if you tell them it’s Linux and you even open the terminal once…
Also, it doesn’t help the fact that movies use it as a prop for hackers, so people can look at it and be wow, just like in that movie I saw. What are you hacking today?
- Lemmeenym ( @Lemmeenym@lemm.ee ) English1•5 months ago
I figure when someone first adopts Linux they are like Abby and McGee double teaming a single keyboard. As they use Linux more they mature into the Lone Gunman from X-Files.
- kryllic ( @kryllic@programming.dev ) 1•5 months ago
I use hollywood so yes