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Operating Systems Software Debian Linux

Knoppix To Split Into 'Light,' 'Maximum' Versions 225

prostoalex writes "Everyone's favorite Knoppix project will be split into light and maximum editions, which should end the argument on whether the Live CD operating system should focus on small footprint, or greater support for external applications." From the linked ZDNet article: "'We will split the mainstream edition of Knoppix into two versions: a 'maximum' DVD edition with a complete Debian installation, and a 'light' edition on CD that contains the most popular desktop and server software only, for older computers or smaller systems that don't have a bootable DVD drive yet,' said Knopper."
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Knoppix To Split Into 'Light,' 'Maximum' Versions

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  • Windows Manager (Score:5, Interesting)

    by goofyheadedpunk ( 807517 ) <goofyheadedpunk.gmail@com> on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @01:01AM (#11144421)
    I'm curious, will Fluxbox be on this "light" disk? I ask because the summary says that the most 'popular desktop'. That would be KDE, but light it is not!
  • by MsGeek ( 162936 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @01:07AM (#11144466) Homepage Journal
    I know that Klaus Knopper doesn't see Knoppix as a Debian installer, but I think that he should take a second look at this, especially considering the idea of a "lite" and a "full" version of the Knoppix CD.

    The "lite" version of the CD should allow for a simplified HD install, complete with Knoppix' superior hardware detection facility. Neither the official Debian Sarge installer nor the Ubuntu installer is as good as Knoppix for "figuring out" the hardware it's looking at. I don't know about Mepis because I've never used it.

    Maybe if Herr Knopper won't do it, someone should fork Knoppix and do it for him.
  • Re:Windows Manager (Score:3, Interesting)

    by MsGeek ( 162936 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @01:19AM (#11144535) Homepage Journal
    I think IceWM is an option that can be set at boot.
  • Re:A note on bloat (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @01:19AM (#11144537)
    > Operating systems expand to fill the available boot media.

    As proven by
    http://www.menuetos.org/
    one floppy, with :
    - Pre-emptive multitasking, multithreading, ring-3 protection
    - Responsive GUI with resolutions up to 1280x1024, 16 million colours
    - IDE: Editor/Macro Assembler for building kernel and applications
    - TCP/IP stack with Loopback, PPP & Ethernet drivers
    - Network applications include ftp/http/mp3/smtp servers,
    - irc, http, nntp and tftp clients
    - Free-form, skinnable application windows
    - Hard real-time data fetch
  • by UnderScan ( 470605 ) <jjp6893@netscap e . n et> on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @01:19AM (#11144538)
    Maybe if Herr Knopper won't do it, someone should fork Knoppix and do it for him.
    Try Kanotix as one of the reasons it was forked from Knoppix was to allow a very easy Debian install.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @01:20AM (#11144540)
    Microsoft is bitching about how people can't trust code that doesn't belong to them, Homeland security says we can't trust what should be a simple piece of software *by* them...

    meanwhile, Knoppix is a wonderful, portable, safe, stable distribution that can go anywhere you do, and is so easy to use that my 87 year old grandmother who is so frial she can't leave her bed (we've had a hospital bed put in her room for her) can literally boot an old laptop (with DOS 6.2 installed) and use it to email and *even instant message* her grandson (me), who is 300km away.

    And its free.

    If there were *ever* a prime demonstration of what can be accomplished by OSS in action, surely Knoppix is that demonstration.

    P.S. I told my grandmother about the microsoft-flaming-firefox thing... she said (and I quote, verbatim)"Someone should tell those... those... those Microstuff people (shes a little poor of hearing) to smarten up or be quiet."

    Grandma, How I Love You.
  • by Yaztromo ( 655250 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @01:51AM (#11144684) Homepage Journal

    I've played with Knoppix before, and think it's just amazing.

    Just over a year ago, I inhereted an old K6-2 450Mhz box with a dead hard drive. As I had an old monitor kicking around, and as I typically hate having guests use any of my workstations, I decided to remove the hard drive and set the system up as a dedicated Knoppix box.

    I dutifully downloaded the ISO and burned a CD, only to find that the machine in question had an old CD-ROM drive incapable of reading 700MB discs. So I was SOL (and eventually found Gnoppix [gnoppix.org], which did fit onto a 650MB disc this machine could boot).

    I can't imagine I've been the only person to run into this issue with Knoppix, so I wonder if this new "lite" version will be designed to work on 650MB discs (although admittedly I had a bit of a rough time even finding such discs to burn that Gnoppix CD oh so long ago).

    (And yes, I suppose I could spend a bit of money and buy a new CD-ROM drive for the machine, but it was a freebie, and is supposed to be a guest machine, so it isn't as if I'm personally hurting by not putting any money into it ;) ).

    Yaz.

  • Re:Who? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by One Childish N00b ( 780549 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @02:39AM (#11144872) Homepage
    This reminds me of my first year of college, studying Computing as one of my subjects. Now my teacher for this was Welsh, and had absolutely no clue about anything not contained within the pages of his hideously out-of-date textbook. He even forced us to learn Pascal when there was C/C++ availible as a 'preferred equivalent' in the curriculum. One long year of being baby-walked through coding and compiling command-line apps with Borland TurboPascal 5.5 for Windows. Sheer Hell. So after wasting countless hours posting to /., reading bash.org and spending as little time as possible coding the crappy database app we were forced to make in probably the worst language I've ever had to code in, we decided to play a little trick on our Welsh tormen^H^H^H^H^H^Htutor - We'd pop a Knoppix CD into one of the few boxes in the room with a CD-ROM drive and wait for him to do his usual rounds. We expected him to go ballistic, but he didnt - He just stared open-jawed at the screen.

    Why? Had he just experienced a sort of open-source epiphany? Was he mesmerised by the dubious beauty of the the KDE backgrounds? No - the reason he was gazing in quiet awe at the contents of the battered, flickering screen in the corner of the computing lab was he thought we'd made it ourselves. In Pascal.
  • by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @02:43AM (#11144893) Homepage Journal
    I work with a charity that gives donated computers to schoolchildren.

    Unless there's a canned one out there, it looks like I'm going to have to roll my own "ultralight" CD to give away to people still running mid-90s hardware: 16-64MB RAM, 500MB-1GB HD, 2-4x CD if you are lucky, 14.4-33.6 modem if you are lucky, ISA or early-PCI sound card and video

    Example software:
    Lightweight web browser w/ Java - FF if it's not too heavy
    Lightweight word processor that opens/saves MS-Word 95 files
    Lightweight spreadsheet that opens/saves MS-Excel 95 files
    Lightweight "presentation" program that opens/saves MS-Powerpoint 95 format

    ssh, ftp, etc.
    lightweight games
    easy-to-use modem-dialer
    cd-audio player/mixer
    MS-Windows remote terminal services client

    and of course support for all kinds of older hardware one might find on computers donated to charity.
    Boot CD with a single floppy.

    Anyone know of a canned Linux distro or bootable CD that fits my needs?

    Anyone see any glaring ommissions from my software requirements?
  • Re:A note on bloat (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Mage Powers ( 607708 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @03:22AM (#11145035) Homepage
    A point that comes up on slashdot here and there, is where do you draw the line with linux? Whats really the "linux operating system"? kernel + coreutils isn't exactly a wholly useful setup. With windows its a bit more obvious, they give you a bunch of crap when you install it.

    I just want to see a definition of "Linux operating system" even if its something variable like "a window manager, a calculator, a web browser, a shell, a kernel etc" just to add some clarification to the whole thing

    But yea I agree with you that 6 cds is a "humungous distribution of non-essential software".
  • Re:Who? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by narcolept ( 741693 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @08:10AM (#11145867)
    I had the same thoughts as yourself on Live CDs until recently, when a friend of mine showed me what he uses Live CDs for. He codes on the side from his real job. When he's on a plane/etc, He takes his work laptop and boots an Ubuntu Live CD, and does his coding there, basically in a demo environment, where he can go ahead and email it to himself at home, save it to a personal usb drive, etc, all with it techincally never touching his emplyer's hard drive. This could be one of the few reasonable uses other than for demonstration purposes. My boss used a Knoppix CD to set up an Asterisk server, if you believe that, which is one of the dumbest uses I've ever seen, and fitting regarding the person I'm talking about...
  • Re:No Web Browser (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 21, 2004 @08:33AM (#11145948)

    try links2

    apt-get install links2

    start with links2 -g : for graphical mode

    as used in damnsmalllinux, and featherlinux, etc, i.e., various stripped down knoppix lightweight distributions

    its as fast as dillo but handles frames, java, ssl etc

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