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Debian

Knoppix 3.7 Released 26

twener writes "Version 3.7 of the bootable GNU/Linux Live CD Knoppix has been released and is available via Bittorrent or on the Knoppix Mirrors. Some of the new features are lots and lots of package updates including KDE 3.3.1, Kernel 2.4.27 + 2.6.9 (w/ ACPI), Java security update (1.4.2_06) and more supported graphics cards."
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Knoppix 3.7 Released

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  • Link to New Features isn't working, getting failed to change directory message
  • by Dancin_Santa ( 265275 ) <DancinSanta@gmail.com> on Friday December 10, 2004 @10:40AM (#11051040) Journal
    If you need to roll back the latest distro because of some bug, you can just pop the old CD back in the drive.

    I use Knoppix on several of my main database servers.
  • by t482 ( 193197 ) on Friday December 10, 2004 @10:46AM (#11051083) Homepage
    Here [distrowatch.com] is a nice review.

    "Developed by Joerg Schirottke, KANOTIX is a surprisingly powerful distribution that has managed to improve on its famous parent by including [kanotix.com] new features and adding several interesting tricks."

    website [kanotix.com]

    • Wow!

      Nice tip! Thanks much. I will be downloading this tonight when I get off from class. I have an ancient Knoppix disc (3.1) that needs to be replaced soon. I figure this may cut the cake!

      As for a GNOME fan, there is little that has met my tastes. I always am compelled to the very elegant KDE based ones. Oh well, perhaps I should just make my own :D
      • As for a GNOME fan, there is little that has met my tastes. I always am compelled to the very elegant KDE based ones. Oh well, perhaps I should just make my own

        If you want a good Gnome distro (live CD and hard drive install), you have to try Ubuntu. It comes with plenty of software to do most activities, and any other software you need is easy to apt-get. There is a reason Gnoppix decided to adopt Ubuntu as its live CD.

  • changing (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 10, 2004 @10:51AM (#11051141)
    * V3.7-2004-12-08
    - Lots and lots of package updates
    - Kernel 2.4.27 + 2.6.9 (w/ ACPI)
    - KDE update: 3.3.1 from Debian/unstable
    - FreeNX 0.2.5 (Fabian Franz)
    - Java security update (1.4.2_06)
    - added a few graphics cards entries
    - added menu entry for SAMBA-browsing
    - isdntool-knoppix for text+GUI based ISDN configuration (will replace isdn-config soon)
    - removed some docs to keep iso image size down (this took awfully long)

    ftp://ftp.uni-kl.de/pub/linux/knoppix/KNOPPIX-CH AN GELOG.txt
  • 3.7 already? I must've missed 3.5 and 3.6. In 3.4 they removed the boot floppy, so I kept 3.3 handy. But 3.3's installation to hard drive didn't work.

    With boot from floppy and install to hard drive, can get some use out of those 10 year old Pentium PCs that have Windows 95 (infected, of course) on a 1G hard drive and can't boot CDs. I know, I know, who'd want to bother with such obsolete hardware when $100 buys a crappy new PC that is nevertheless far better.

    • With boot from floppy and install to hard drive, can get some use out of those 10 year old Pentium PCs that have Windows 95 (infected, of course) on a 1G hard drive and can't boot CDs. I know, I know, who'd want to bother with such obsolete hardware when $100 buys a crappy new PC that is nevertheless far better.

      Smart Boot Manager lets you boot itself from floppy (as well as CD-ROM, hard disk, etc.). It then lets you continue the boot process from whatever media you wish. It's perfect for those comput

    • Old pcs (Score:3, Informative)

      by cbr2702 ( 750255 )
      10 year old Pentium PCs that have Windows 95 (infected, of course) on a 1G hard drive and can't boot CDs.

      For these, Knoppix is not the best tool. Debian would work well though. Knoppix is designed as a demonstration tool and is unbelievably slow on old machines. Debian allows you to cut out the parts of the install you don't need, something completely nessicary when dealing with limited memory and hard-drive space.

  • Is there an easy way to make Knoppix -- or some other live CD distribution -- spill the install over into a hard drive?

    I would like to have a persistent home directory. I want the configuration to be persistent. I want to be able to install packages, because Knoppix does not cover all I need, but I want the packages managed by APT.

    The persistent stuff could easily sit on a network share, although local hard drive would be preferable for latency reasons.

    And I don't want to accomplish this using someone

  • Seems like they should make a .torrent out of that while they are at it.
  • If anyone I know wants to try out Linux I can just give them the Knoppix CD and tell them that while they can't install this demo, they can install something almost identical to it. Then if they like it you can give them Mandrake, SuSE or God-forbid, Fedora. It's great and Microsoft has nothing on it right now.

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