Progeny Debian 1.0 Released 167
martins99 writes: "Progeny was released today. It is a commercial dist based on debian but with lots of new stuff which Debian 2.2 (potato) or woody (testing) lacks like: support for 2.4, graphical installation, XFree86 4.02, glibc 2.2. Read more at www.progeny.com." Since Stormix is ailing so badly, I hope Progeny can do better...
Re:Progeny IS Supreme! (Score:1)
Debian install is easy as Pie. (Score:1)
a little apprehnesive because of the install's
reputation.
I read the install documentation a couple of times
crossed my fingers, and took the plunge.
Too my surprize I found a straight forward install
that went very smooth.
I even managed to install KDE with installer
because it asks you if you want to install any
extra software when you are choosing your packages.
True, I didn't just push a button, and go watch
TV, but after doing it, I kept wondering what all
the fuss was about.
Re:Woody does in fact (Score:1)
blah....nice graphical installer...GRUB included...commercial support...hmmmm...sounds like Mandrake to me.
Want some differences? How about...
These are just a few of the reasons I abandoned Mandrake.
Progency Service Network (Score:2)
they're the same (Score:1)
They are the same, just a filename extension difference
You burn the .raw images just like you would burn a normal .iso image.
.laz
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My car is orange, my sig is not.
Re:apt (Score:2)
Re:Progeny (Score:1)
Re:Debian Installer (Score:1)
The installer is extremely flexible. At any point during the installation, you can stop what you're doing and go back to an earlier step of the procedure, or skip ahead to future steps. If what you want to do isn't supported in the menu, the installer can spawn an ash shell and get a command line on the machine even before you've partitioned or formatted a disk. You can handle just about any special case you can imagine by hand at the shell prompt. You could do the entire installation that way if you like! It's true the Debian's installer isn't the prettiest or the easiest, but it's one of the most powerful and flexible there is. You can't get much more flexible than a shell prompt!
Re:Woody does in fact (Score:1)
These are just a few of the reasons I abandoned Mandrake.
My main reason for dropping Mandrake Cooker in favor of Debian Unstable was that (a) Debian Unstable is a hell of a lot more stable, and (b) has a lot more useful software packaged and easily installable, not to mention (c) upgrades seem to go a LOT more cleanly and smoothly...
Okay, so that's three main reasons... I don't need to know how to count, just how to write a loop to count things for me...
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Re:Which 2.4 kernel is in Woody? (Score:1)
apt-get install kernel-package /usr/share/doc/kernel-package
cd
zmore README
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Re:KDE2? (Score:1)
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Re:Progeny Debian has potential (Score:1)
Hmm. Yes. When I find a bug or am having a problem with Debian, I submit a bug report or email the package maintainer and usually get a response and sometimes a fix within 24 hours.
With most companies I can't even *find* the email addresses of the appropriate people to email my reports and patches to. I did get a response from a knowledgeable programmer at Sun once, but it sure took a long time.
Yup, Debian lacks commercial support, thank the gods...
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Re:Progeny (Score:2)
But are the problems you had problems with the actual packages, with the archives themselves, or really with apt-get? I suspect it's more likely that the problems were related to Corel's archive. Perhaps they provided e.g. a version of libc that apt-get interpreted as being "newer". It's not apt-gets fault, it's that Corel didn't intend to make it easy for *Debian* users to get the package, they intended to make it easy for *Corel Linux* users to get the packages.
There are several lists available of unofficial apt sources. apt-get is designed to easily handle many sources, related or not. That doesn't mean it's immune to screwed up archives.
noah
OT: your sig (Score:1)
___
Re:I hope it suceeds (Score:1)
I love Debian. I use it when I want a linux distro. Its package management (apt-get) rocks. But its installer does suck. I don't know what it is that makes it suck, but it does. I always feel like I am fighting with it. I don't use the installer anymore if I can help it. I made a pretty generic install of base2_2, and the drivers. Upgraded to woody and made a nice tar ball. A few hacks to the boot disks later and I have a bootable cdrom with fdisk, tar, and lilo to make the hard drive bootable. It works great. I can now get past the install quickly and install all those great .debs.
The install really does suck. Sorry.
Re:Distro's (Score:1)
2.4 support? (Score:3)
Re:what about ReiserFS (Score:1)
Re:I hope it suceeds (Score:2)
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Dude, dissing Slackware as "not-modern" is like putting a big neon sign on your head that says "I'm a newbie!"
Poor business judgment (Score:2)
Progeny should have set things up so that you can buy the boxed set a month ahead of it being available online, rather than vice versa (with any last-minute security bugs made available online immediately, as with security.debian.org).
This is completely in keeping with the GPL, and would make it more likely that they will collect enough money to pay staff. The free-beer crowd would whine, but without some means of motivating people to pay up, Progeny has even fewer prospects for business success than the fifth dot-com to try to sell you pet food over the net.
Re:Watching the Slashdot effect in action (Score:1)
Re:Watching the Slashdot effect in action (Score:1)
Re:Mirrors, navigation design (Score:1)
Re:Can I go back to potato? (Score:1)
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
You're right, Debian stable has only older stuff. But if you get into your sources.list file and change "stable" to "unstable" and apt-get dist-upgrade, you get all of the goodies you desire (except for pre-compiled 2.4 kernels, but as someone pointed out, I'm going to recompile my kernel anyway -- and kmake-kpkg makes it pretty painless).
As for the stability of "unstable", well, Red Hat's x.0 releases wish they could be this "unstable". Honestly, when testing freezes (hopefully with a 2.4 kernel) I may just switch my sources.list back to "stable" and forget about needing the latest and greatest stuff every day...
(Yeah, right... who am I kidding? *grin*)
Jay (=
Re:Progeny (Score:2)
Well I am very much a convert to apt-get. There's nothing like thinking of a package you don't have and just apt-get install'ing it. Works very reliably. My main beef is apt-get upgrade asking you every time if you really want to do it - that's just silly and there should at least be a way to configure that feature off.
I briefly used progeny before switching to debian unstable, and I'd recommend it for someone who wants a little handholding. It's a pretty safe way to be close to the bleeding edge. Personally, I like having the 100's of debian maintainers backing me up so I go with the real thing but if you aren't really hard core, Progeny is probably a better idea.
I agree with you about Mandrake - it's really easy to get started with, but doesn't have apt-get. You probably never considered Conectiva, the Brazilian distro but actually I think it's about the smoothest installing and best-configured Linux I've used so far, and it has a version of apt-get modified to use rpm's. Recommended.
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I'm never up-to-date on these things (Score:1)
Installing 2.2 was a lot harder than it was to install 2.1 for some reason. Perhaps it was the fact that my old system was so customized and I had to start over with a default (crippled) setup.
Maybe I'll try upgrading to Progeny but I'm sick of installing stuff. And my 28.8 isn't up to a net upgrade.
Re:Progeny (Score:1)
Re:Progeny (Score:1)
Lilo will point to
2 questions: SB Live & KDE2? (Score:2)
Has anyone with a SB Live sound card tried it? Does it detect the card?
I read that it's an old KDE which is included and that it isn't even installed by default. I "know" most people here are GNOME people, but there are really many KDE users out there for who, Progeny will then always, sadly, be a secondary option. It is not about how easy it is to apt-get it afterwards, it's about support for your choice of desktop environment. If Progeny supports only GNOME and not KDE (which they obviously do), then they will not get many customers that prefer KDE.
Greetings Joergen
Re:How open, really? (Score:1)
Re:I hope it suceeds (Score:2)
OTOH, don't denegrate someone just because he is experiencing FUD. Real FUD exists, and is hard to get through.
The problem is so many fakers exist. It's the fakery that's the problem. And generally, though they spread FUD, they aren't even claiming to be experiencing it.
Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
ppp? (Score:2)
Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
Re:ppp? (Score:2)
Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
Alternative uses (Score:3)
Even so, Progeny itself is quite cool, especially the commercial support aspects. Hopefully they can succeed where (in some sense) Storm Linux failed.
(interesting test of the strength of the apt/dpkg system: switch from progeny to unstable to stable and all the way back and see if stuff still works stably....)
Re:new and broken (Score:2)
That's funny, it works fine with my old Matrox Millennium [xfree86.org] and the Chips & Technology 65550 [xfree86.org] in my old Libretto...
For the record... (Score:5)
It is correct that none of these are in Potato. However, there are unofficial packages for running 2.4 kernels [fs.tum.de] and XFree86 4 [cpbotha.net] in Potato, both provided by Debian developers.
Which 2.4 kernel is in Woody? (Score:2)
Eh? (Score:1)
Seriously. They just don't *care*. Or maybe it's that they only test with ie & netscape.. and the netscape one does okay for otehr browsers.
All it says is they called the second stylesheet for non-MS browsers 'nn_global.css'. It doesn't say 'if you don't have netscape, fuck off'
Besides.. I bet they don't care anyway.
Really? (Score:2)
Really, it's just a pre-set confiuration of debian.
Re:Upgrading from potato? (Score:2)
4.0 is a major problem (Score:1)
Re:It is targetted as home beginner (Score:1)
2.4 in Progeny (Score:1)
I found it to be immensely simpler than Debian (for newbies, like my dad), but it has some simple gotchas, like the fact that it doesn't ask whether the second CD is available. Other than that little annoyance, Progeny is pretty tight!
Cuchullain
Re:not enough. (Score:1)
No way I'm ever working for Progeny. They don't let you sleep, by the sounds of it! Either that or they have more than 24 hours/7 days in the corporate week. And they say Steve Jobs has a "Reality Distortion Field"... this sounds like some wacky Debian-based cult.
Don't drink the Kool-Aid, Branden! For the love of God, don't!
Re:Can I go back to potato? (Score:1)
Re:new and broken (Score:2)
Pretty much the only vaguely common cards that XFree 4 doesn't support are the old S3 Trios (not the Trio3D, which is supported). Still, if you do own some ancient crufty thing, the Debian packagers have thoughtfully included modified XFree 3 packages that only support the cards that XFree 4 doesn't.
Note that pretty much every cheap graphics card on the market for the past 5 years is supported by XFree 4. Note also that the new Vesa driver in XFree 4 means that pretty much every graphics card on the planet is supported to some degree, something that wasn't true under XFree 3.
Re:KDE2? (Score:2)
given equal weight.
Thereby increasing development costs significantly as they have to rewrite all their Gnome-based config utilities to use QT as well? Progeny made a decision to support one desktop environment over another in order to make life easier for themselves.
Re:It is targetted as home beginner (Score:1)
Re:KDE2? (Score:2)
Progeny (Score:3)
Re:Progeny (Score:3)
Huh? (Score:3)
It is nice to see a "friendlier" debian-based distro "for the masses" but that doesn't excuse people from the usual "debian is slow" and "debian only has OLD packages" crap.
-nicole
Re:Difference between .raw and .iso (Score:1)
I have no clue why they do that. It's like when they released RC2 and named the installation diskettes *.img instead of .bin. rawrite wouldn't recognize the extension. And nothing in the release notes to explain it either.
A newbie shouldn't feel the need to call Miss Cleo on something like that.
Re:How open, really? (Score:1)
Re:How open, really? (Score:1)
You may, if you wish, refer to such orthographical conventions as "hyphecap." This will save some typing in the future.
Upgrading from potato? (Score:1)
However, why would I want to do that? I'm happy with debian, and actually I no longer have potato, since I'm using woody to get X4.02 and KDE2.1.
Please someone enlighten me.
Re:No troll: they will fail within four months (Score:1)
good try but... (Score:1)
Recently konqueror has gained an option allowing you to use the mozilla engine to render pages, instead of khtml, but anyhow, you are mistaken about konqueror, right about galeon.
however... (Score:1)
since it isn't available any other way...
Wrong (Score:2)
Being that Stormix doesn't exactly exist as a commerical entity, Progeny effectively replaces it.
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CAIMLAS
Re:KDE2? (Score:2)
--------
Genius dies of the same blow that destroys liberty.
Re:Progeny Debian has potential (Score:2)
Reading Package Lists... Done
Building Dependency Tree... Done
Some packages could not be installed. This may mean that you have
requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable
distribution that some required packages have not yet been created
or been moved out of Incoming.
Since you only requested a single operation it is extremely likely that
the package is simply not installable and a bug report against
that package should be filed.
The following information may help to resolve the situation:
Sorry, but the following packages have unmet dependencies:
clue: Depends: cmucl-clx but it is not installable
E: Sorry, broken packages
--------
Genius dies of the same blow that destroys liberty.
This is new? (Score:3)
This should make convincing the PHB's that Debian is a viable solution vs. RedHat. Now, we have a vendor to go to for Debian as well. It's not a selling point to me, but the bosses seem to like the fact that a Linux distributions is 'supported'.
Can I go back to potato? (Score:3)
I'd really like to check it out, but I also want safe path back.
Re:I hope it suceeds (Score:1)
--
Obfuscated e-mail addresses won't stop sadistic 12-year-old ACs.
Re:ppp? (Score:1)
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Obfuscated e-mail addresses won't stop sadistic 12-year-old ACs.
Re:Which installer should I rewrite? (Score:1)
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Obfuscated e-mail addresses won't stop sadistic 12-year-old ACs.
Re:quick question.... (Score:1)
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Obfuscated e-mail addresses won't stop sadistic 12-year-old ACs.
Re:the Ximian of distros (Score:1)
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Obfuscated e-mail addresses won't stop sadistic 12-year-old ACs.
Re:I hope it suceeds (Score:2)
The instruction for acquiring the distribution are unclear. Visiting www.debian.org and trying to obtain ISO images makes me go through a bloody great big questionairre which tells me that cause of my broadband connection I should download it.
There's no `fuck off and let me decide for myself' button. What if I want to install on more than one machine? For a distro that uses `its aimed at technial users' as an excuse for being damned unfriendly, this lack of control is surprising.
As for the installation , I like to think I'm experienced enough with Linux to install just about any distro without RTFM. I know how Linux works. Debian requiores me to read the manual it seems (though I really copuldn't be bothered after my last install). Things like E: for error messages, and `base system' aren't immediately obvious. Prolly my fault for not reading the documentation, but usually, I expoect the documentation to be online. No such luck with the Debian installer.
the choices ambiguous, the order illogical,
or something like that,
In my opinion, its buggy. I tried to do a floppy install on 2 machines. I got driver disk one and loaded it when asked. The installer slowly grabbed the fioles of disk. In the next part, the installer told me there were no modules in its install directory, and to go back to the loading modules bit. Okay, I might have a bad floppy disk. But no error messages. That pisses me off significantly.
There's other issues to. There shoudl be a vertical scroll bar indicating the steps for the menu go off the bottom of the screen. THis is basic GUI fundamentals. There isn't one.
I could see the problem. But, the only "problem" you describe is that it's text based.
Most users have no idea that tab and space can be used to navigate a GUI. they also have no idea what modules are and why they shoul;d be loading them.
Apt-get is great, and installing packages with dependency chains in most distros in bad enough that I would simply call it `broken'. But either using the RPM version of APT or some other new tool with fix that within the next six months. Maybe Red Hat will set up a unsupported mirror with a stack pf packages tested against its distro, and use RHN as a download mechanism (allowing paid subscribers to also get closed source apps and perhaps support for these packages).
Yes, installing packages under most distros sucks. But using Debian isn't the answer for those that want to make this easier on themselves, in my opinion anyway. Give it some time and I bet every distro will do this within a year.
Re:KDE2? (Score:2)
Last I heard, they were using KDE 1.2 (one and a half years old) in the last beta.
It is really targeted to working with Gnome, not KDE.
That seems rather pathetic of Progeny. So now users are supposed to pick their apps based on toolkit rather than quality?
I though this type of childish bullshit ended a long time ago, once every modern distro decided to let people choose.
How exactly do they compile Glibc 2.2 on non x86? (Score:3)
It is targetted as home beginner (Score:3)
Ah and to provide commercial support on Debian based system, which is not a bad idea.
Re:default wm/desktop (Score:1)
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Full plate and packing steel! -Minsc
The differnce between Progeny & Woody (Score:1)
deb http://archive.progeny.com/progeny updates/newton/
to
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Full plate and packing steel! -Minsc
Re:I hope it suceeds (Score:2)
If you find that the instructions are unclear, the choices ambiguous, the order illogical, or something like that, I could see the problem. But, the only "problem" you describe is that it's text based.
Why is that a problem? What is so intimidating about a text interface? It's still got buttons and menus -- it's not like you have to edit configuration files. Does the average new user even know what the difference between text mode and graphics mode is?
I've always thought that this obsession with installers that run in graphics mode has been a red herring.
Which installer should I rewrite? (Score:2)
Progeny is a very good thing (Score:2)
The Progeny guys don't support the full 3000+ packages available for Debian. (Right now if you were to burn CDs for the latest version of Debian it would take 4 CDs to hold all the packages; Progeny fits on a single CD.) They have put together a working, tested set of packages that make a pretty darn nice installation, and they will keep it up to date. For many people Progeny will provide them with everything they will ever need.
Since Progeny is still Debian, you can easily add packages from the main Debian distribution if you want something that Progeny doesn't provide. And if you ever tire of Progeny or they ever disappear, you can just switch smoothly over to using the main Debian distribution. So there really is no down side to choosing Progeny.
And, by the way, Progeny is donating all their new stuff back to the Debian community. So the improved installer should find its way to Debian. (Probably not for the Woody release, but the one after that should have it.)
For my friends who get interested in Linux, I am burning Progeny CDs and giving them away.
steveha
Re:Can I go back to potato? (Score:2)
Okay. You are right.
I'm using the latest Debian stuff. When it's all nice and stable it will all be released under the name of "Woody", thus in my mind I'm using Woody, albeit I'm using the unstable branch. But I should use the names the same way everyone else does!
The "stable" version of Debian right now is Potato. Thus "stable" and "Potato" both refer to the same collection of packages.
The "testing" version of Debian is called Woody. When testing is over and Woody is released, then Potato will be retired and Woody will become the new stable. A new code name will be chosen for the next Debian (from the movie Toy Story if the tradition holds), and that new code name will be the new testing.
The "unstable" version of Debian is called "Sid" and always will be called that. (Sid was the boy who enjoyed destroying and mangling toys. Of all characters in Toy Story he was the clear choice for a code name for unstable!)
If you want the latest packages, you should apt-get from unstable. If you want fairly recent packages and you want less risk, you should apt-get from testing. When a package has been in unstable for a while and it tests out okay, it gets migrated over into testing. Thus, there is a huge overlap between the packages in testing and the ones in unstable: every package in testing is in unstable, but the version in unstable might be a more recent version.
Because testing and unstable are fairly close, you can apt-get from unstable, and then switch back to testing if you like. This can be a convenient way to grab a few packages you want that are too new to be in testing yet.
I have found that unstable hasn't lived up to its name; I haven't had any bad problems with it yet, and I really want to get each update to GNOME as soon as possible, so I'm using unstable right now.
steveha
Re:Progeny is a very good thing (Score:2)
steveha
Re:Can I go back to potato? (Score:5)
The important thing about Progeny is this: it is Debian.
They didn't screw anything up or glue in something proprietary. It's just a particular set of Debian packages with a nice installer.
Thus, once you have Progeny set up, you can point your sources.list file at a Debian mirror, and start using apt-get against the Woody package set, and you are using Woody.
Their installer does create a few icons on the desktop that say Progeny, but if you were really gung-ho about having a non-Progeny Woody system you could delete those.
As for going back to Potato, it would be just the same as taking a Woody system back to Potato. I have never done it but it would be possible. Just point sources.list at a Potato package set, and use apt-get to get the Potato packages. You will have to force apt-get to "downgrade" since the versions of the packages will be older, but that functionality is supported. It would be something of a pain, and I don't know why you would bother; I'm running Woody unstable and I'm extremely happy with it.
steveha
Re:what about ReiserFS (Score:2)
There are 2 projects, both of which provide Debian installer disks with support for Reiserfs. Yes, they're Potato disks, but there are no "woody" disks yet anyway; you'll have to install potato and apt-get dist-upgrade no matter what.
Sotto la panca, la capra crepa
According to packages.debian.org (Score:4)
That being said, I see Progeny as a definite Good Thing. Personally, I don't have any problems with the Debian installer, but I understand that some people do; different people approach things from different directions(thus explaining the many window managers in the *nix world). From my experience, Debian is much easier to keep up-to-date once it is installed than any RPM-based distribution, and if more people find that it's also easy to install, great.
Sotto la panca, la capra crepa
Re:Difference between .raw and .iso (Score:3)
I wish people would agree to the same extension!
I also wish they'd stick to the same boot procedure (SysV?), but that's a different story.
Libranet URL (Score:2)
Re:Progeny (Score:2)
Re:Progeny (Score:2)
For a list of unofficial sources see http://www.internatif.org/bortzmeyer/debian/apt-so urces/ [internatif.org].
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Re:Wrong (Score:2)
Are you saying slackware is not a modern distro? I am sorry but nobody can contest that slackware has the best free support system anywhere. It offers new packages in binary format sooner than almost any other distro (even though most slackers compile themselves). And slackware follows standards better than any of your "modern" distros! It is like one of the only systems where you can install the linux kernel with "make install" instead of copying it to some silly place Linus doesnt intend it to be in.
Slackware not a modern distro. Go boil your bottom you stupid son of a silly person. Now go away or I shall taunt you a second time-e!
Woody does in fact (Score:3)
So can you use kernel 2.4 from installation? (Score:2)
I hope it suceeds (Score:3)
KDE2? (Score:2)
If it has KDE2 I'm game.
Re:KDE2? (Score:2)
Debian Installer (Score:3)
I've nothing against non-GUI installs, but I'm all against routines that are inflexible and brittle - that fail in the (not so) exceptional cases. That, and developers who think the exceptional cases are the user's fault. Difficult to walk into a client's shop to do a new install using Debian, when you know you might end up looking dumb and swearing at the machine if it happens to be hardware for which the Debian install derails; at least with Red Hat you know, despite the trade-off in long-term maintainability, you're going to look efficient as you install it. So I'd say putting a solid installation routine on the front of Debian could just be brilliant.
Don't feel stupid (Score:2)
I've just run scandisk so I can show exactly what you can expect and recognize the "I hate Linux" warning signs. This will appear as a slightly smaller window (dialogue box) over the main window of scandisk.
ScanDisk Found an Error on Local Disk (C:)____[?] [X]
_______________________________________________
This drive's boot area contains important information that is damaged
or invalid. This can cause Windows to report the drive's free space
incorrectly or slowly. ScanDisk repairs the boot area by recording the
correct values in this area
O Repair this error.
O Ignore this error and continue.
[___OK___] [_CANCEL_]
Click, of course, Ignore, and it'll come up telling you, "Scandisk found errors on this disk, but did not fix all of them," followed by your disks statistics. That is nothing to worry about, because neither LiLo or GRUB are errors;)
Happy computing,
.oO(By Linus, I actually just said that...By Linus, I just said "By Linus!")
Eric
Here Here! (Score:3)
Though, I guess it's hard to answer the question, "What kind of tech support does it have," with, "There are people all around the world with way too much time on their hands willing to help out on USENET and bboards scattered throughout the Linux world."
As I read at an anti-linux site*, PHB's seem to be looking for someone to sue.
*two friends of mine seem to enjoy sending me tidbits from anti-linux sites. that's not as bad as "Microsoft's PenguiNT"...
dricci.com/mspr-pnt1.shtml
Progeny IS Supreme! (Score:3)