Hello everybody,

   Ran across this old article while I was searching for old LFS  
material:

Linux and love; the Gerard Beekmans story
By JT Smith on December 27, 2000 (8:00:00 AM)
- by Julie Bresnick -

Gerard Beekmans started Linux From Scratch, his guide to building a  
Linux Operating System from the bottom up, for two reasons. First,  
because he didn't like the way existing distributions dictated  
organization and ultimately had more control over his operating system  
than he did. Second, because he had just moved from Holland to  
Toronto, Canada, to marry the woman he fell in love with online. His  
working papers hadn't come through yet so he had some extra time on  
his hands.
Though the Linux From Scratch (LFS) project is impressive, any warm  
blooded being must be at least slightly more intrigued by the latter  
than the former, no matter how Linux-obsessed they may be. Romance  
online is stirring in and of itself, add the altar and throw in the  
international fare and we've got a blockbuster. Or perhaps an after  
school special would be a more appropriate demographic considering the  
protagonist was barely old enough to legally sip champagne at his own  
wedding.

Now he is twenty-one and the honeymoon has come and gone. Linux From  
Scratch drew the attention of BC Publishing, and by the time  
permission to work in Canada was granted, he had a job waiting.  
Combined with his wife Beverly's, his new income enabled them to move  
out of her parent's house. One more move within the Toronto area and  
Gerard may finally have the constancy for which he's been yearning  
since he moved out of his mother's house. Whether remarrying or simply  
restless, Beekman's mother relocated herself and her brood (eventually  
seven children) roughly twelve times before her eldest, Gerard, went  
to college at seventeen. Which would explain why he was so receptive  
to the idea of setting up his own home.

He says moving to Canada was the best thing he's done in a while. And  
the look on his face in pictures from his wedding confirm the pleasure  
I could hear in his voice. He is long and lean and will look different  
at thirty then he does at twenty-one but he won't alter much after  
that. Once he fully matures he will be one of those men who get  
increasingly svelte as they age.

Usually here in America we see someone looking so pleased and so young  
at the altar and we call him or her naive. But maybe the Dutch are  
different. And maybe a year of daily digital chat let Gerard and Bev  
explore each other so thoroughly as to leave little doubt. Maybe his  
confidence professionally, which most people don't achieve till later  
on in life, left room for him to fall in love. He never had to say, I  
just want to wait till I'm more secure in my job, because he was  
already such a strong programmer that he could choose not to do it.

He was about 8 when he learned BASIC on his family's Commodore 64. And  
he got his first computer job, technical support for an Internet  
service provider, a few months before he started college, where he  
signed up to study programming. After the first year not learning  
anything he hadn't already taught himself, he was ready to start over  
in systems and network administration. But all that time, during his  
first year, that he didn't have to spend studying, he spent instead on  
IRC getting to know Bev. That fall they realized they were interested  
in much more than just chatting and he planned a trip for that  
December. When he returned, his course was clear. He would concentrate  
on earning some money to facilitate the move and to fund the  
celebration.

That year at college was a doozy. Not only did he meet his first love,  
but his second too. He says there were a lot of geeks there and that  
they introduced him to Linux. But that relationship didn't go quite as  
smoothly as his first one did. When he got up to speed with the  
distributions, he became less pleased.

"If you use Red Hat or any of those general distributions you're stuck  
with the way they want you to work. Like the way the files are  
organized or the way the programs are installed and the package  
management. I just want more freedom and the distributions, they  
limited that and if I were to implement my own I could really do  
everything exactly the way I wanted, organize everything exactly the  
way I wanted to so I would know how everything was installed and where  
to find everything. I want pure control over the system. I like  
knowing what is where and what is happening behind my back."

To share what he learned from building his own, he set up Linux From  
Scratch, a documentation/tutorial-type project, available in varying  
formats, that leads readers through the process of building their own  
system right from the start. The disclaimer in the introduction  
clearly suggests that home brewing is not for beginners and  
continually encourages users to take initiative.

"It gives example ways of doing things, how to set up certain  
configuration files. But it does urge the user, the person installing  
it, to come up with his own ways of what he likes. They can use my  
example or do their own. It does stop in places where the user is  
supposed to do something himself. Like when it comes to the boot  
scripts or the configuration files of some programs it just doesn't  
install something it makes the user create something so the user  
actually has to do something himself to get something to work. That's  
the best way to learn what you're doing by doing it yourself and  
having to figure it out. But it does come with a standard set of  
scripts and files so there's something to base it on. The idea behind  
it is that you come up with your own plans, your own idea."

BC Publishing pays him to work on LFS for two full days per work week  
and the rest he is their Linux Network Administrator. But as LFS  
project leader he finds himself tending to LFS about twenty-five to  
thirty hours a week which is good because he prefers to program as a  
hobby and network administrate at work because it means he can  
interact more with clients.

He started Linux From Scratch in the Spring of 1999, while  
anticipating his big move. He didn't pick it up again until Bev  
suggested it might be a good way to pass the time while she was at  
work and he was waiting for mail from immigration. It was a smart  
suggestion. It didn't just attract an employer and a burgeoning  
developer community, it has, just three months after joining BC  
Publishing, attracted Big Blue.

"Brian [his boss] just got word from IBM that they might be interested  
in the LFS project. Now we need to draw up a plan of ten reasons why  
IBM can benefit from LFS. If things go right there could be some major  
funding coming our way. There could be really big things happening for  
LFS if we do it right."

But whether IBM decides to throw their weight behind LFS or not,  
Gerard is looking forward to getting the word out about the project in  
the new year.

-William
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