OpenLinux 2.2 Released 55
An anonymous reader wrote in to say that
OpenLinux 2.2 is official if
you're looking for a change of pace. Might want to check
out the review we posted earlier too.
After the last of 16 mounting screws has been removed from an access cover, it will be discovered that the wrong access cover has been removed.
whoa (Score:1)
Re: Partition Magic, Lite Version (Score:1)
Alex Bischoff
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/.'ed? (Score:1)
I can't seem to get through at all.
-W.W.
Caldera the least open distribution? (Score:1)
That's made kernel upgrades quite fun for some of their customers (binary modules) in past.
Now, we have a distro that can't really 'hold its own' without some 3rd party proprietary app to prop itself up with.
Self Hosted? (Score:1)
Sounds like they took some "important" packages and cleaned up the code. Sounds good so far, but then they mention compatability. If they broke some common libs to work only with Caldera products it would kill their product, or at least get a very harsh backlash from the community. Hopefully they just added some comments in the code and talked with the authors about any other changes.
dave
2.2 install (Score:1)
Self Hosted? (Score:1)
glibc 2.1 compatibility woes.. (Score:1)
OpenLinux's bundling of glibc 2.1 bothers me. I just finished spending two hours downgrading my Debian 2.1 system to glibc 2.0.7 after installing the new glibc 2.1 from potato. It just broke too many things, including Java (the Blackdown JDK 1.1.7 won't start due to a runtime linker error, and JDK 1.2 only works with green threads and no JIT) and several KDE applications refused to run because of similar runtime linker errors. The ironic thing is that I only installed the new glibc in the process of installing apache-mod-jserv from potato to run Java servlets, which (through a chain of dependencies) required glibc 2.1, despite the fact that the JDK itself wasn't compatible with glibc 2.1!
I've had equally poor luck trying to upgrade RedHat systems to GLIBC 2.1 using Rawhide. It's just a mess right now, and I don't understand why the glibc maintainers didn't just bump the version number to libc7, and save us all the hassle of trying to upgrade everything all at once! This is just as bad than the a.out->ELF transition, where some apps would require a certain (older) version of libc5, while others required a different (newer) version.
I don't think Caldera has solved the problem either, since they're bundling JDK 1.0.2 with OpenLinux. If you have any interest at all in Java, you'd best sit this one out for a few months, until the folks at Blackdown have a chance to release a good JDK version that supports GLIBC 2.1, and until all of your other non-open-source application vendors have a chance to recompile everything that broke in the transition...
Good deal! (Score:1)
There were just a few details on the requirements for installing that caught my eye: minimum hard drive space was 12MB was listed on the first page (nice!), but on the hardware page it listed 160MB to 1.2 GB. I don't think the 12MB is the full graphical install they were talking about.
Version Numbering (Score:1)
It is a common cause for newbies who think the version of their distribution is the version of Linux their using. (I'm sick of people talking about 'Linux 6.0' when they mean for example SuSE 6.0 or 'Linux 5.1' when they mean RedHat 5.1.
As Caldera is aiming their distribution towards the newbies hopefully their version numbering scheme will clear things up although it's too late for most other distributions (except Debian) to follow a similar naming scheme as if they started to go to kernel numbers to identify their distributions it would appear very strange.
Imagine upgrading from RedHat 6.0 to RedHat 2.2.5!!
It's a shame that despite their name Caldera appears to be the least open of all linux distributors.
But good luck to Caldera if this product is half as user friendly as it's made out to be it could be the entry point to a whole new generation of Linux users.
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Partition Magic (Score:1)
distros free for download.
-Leo.
Does Caldera Contribute? (Score:1)
I run Mandrake 5.3
What will this do to Red Hat? (Score:1)
playing tricks on me?
I've had a hard time with winblows today
but I don't recall taking a drink.
Partition Magic (Score:1)
Partition Magic (Score:1)
glibc 2.1 compatibility woes.. (Score:1)
/.'ed? - Back up now (Score:1)
KDE (Score:1)
I am installing it and I see KDE.
It is installed and rebooting and I see KDE.
LiLo goes away and I see KDE.
KDM instead of console and I did not want it nor
select any options to have it run. Heck, I did
not even get a list of packages to choose from.
only three options: minimal, normal and a full install.
I went back three times to see what the
fourth, no-name, check box was, and to see if
I could maybe have some control over what I got
on my machine. Kinda sucks when you loose control
just so that it can be easier to isntall for others.
Oh, well though. I guess that is just the way it must be. Or not?
and it was free today at comdex. (Score:1)
Linux 2.2.x kernal? (Score:1)
Also, the documentation contains several other typos... have they actual proofread this stuff? Besides the petty mistakes I am pointing out here, this looks like it could be a really nice distribution!
No sign of Partition Magic though (Score:1)
Caldera the least open distribution? (Score:1)
Partition Magic (Score:1)
With ver 1.1 & 1.2 they made a lite version that didn't include any commercial software that was restricted by liscence. That included their nwclient software, metro-x etc.
With 1.3 they got rid of the lite and standard version all together, instead making a single version off the base. getting rid of any commercial software that they can't distribute over download and moving apps like nwclient to a new license free to use with the system, so the 1.3 download area is exactly the same files you get on the cd.
Currently I'm in the process of downloading 2.2 at this very moment and it looks similiar to the 1.3 setup so I expect most if not all files to be there.
Partition Magic (Score:1)
Or even better just ncftp to ftp.calderasystems.com/pub/OpenLinux/2.2
glibc 2.1 compatibility woes.. (Score:1)
Randy Weems
and it was free today at comdex. (Score:1)
What will this do to Red Hat? (Score:1)
I still don't like Red Hat, but use it for the lack of something I like better! I like slackware, but I want glibc. I'd try Debian, but I don't have the time to go through its complex install. I might give OpenLinux a try...
Version Numbering (Score:1)
Diversity (Score:1)
What will this do to Red Hat? (Score:1)
Is that a problem? If Linux crushes Microsoft as Linus suggested today SOMEONE will have the majority of the market. There will never be an even split
Partition Magic (Score:1)
thanks
What will this do to Red Hat? (Score:1)
Keep Linux free - keep those releases coming, everyone!
-Ed Carp, http://www.pobox.com/~erc, erc@pobox.com
What will this do to Red Hat? (Score:1)
Keep Linux free - keep those releases coming, everyone!
-Ed Carp, http://www.pobox.com/~erc, erc@pobox.com