Libranet 2.7 Released 224
Jon wrote in with news that Libranet 2.7 has been released. I've never tried Libranet, but Debian 3.0 is a fine, up-to-date OS with the usual Debian installation (harder than necessary), so if Libranet offers that Debian goodness with a better installer it should be an excellent choice for both experienced and newbie users.
Debian based distros (Score:1)
Storm, another promising Debian based distro that I was sad to see fade away.
Re:Debian based distros (Score:2)
Re:Debian based distros (Score:1)
On the one hand: sure if they have some good idea to improve and want to make money out of it, why not.
On the other Hand: the improvement has to be real worth it!! Otherwise people (like me, too) will stick to the original.
Re:Debian based distros (Score:1)
Re:We're still around... (Score:1)
I tried the beta... (Score:1)
Libranet rocks (Score:1, Interesting)
It features scripts for recompiling the kernel (works) and installing NVidia drivers (almost worked, but was easy to fix and has since been updated).
It's much faster than SuSE 7.2 was on the same machine, even making KDE fun to use. And that was before the kernel recompile.
Oh, and did I mention hardware autodetection?
Their "XAdminmenu" is worth having, too, and I understand 2.7 has improvements.
Seriously, go get this!
Hmmm (Score:4, Interesting)
Talking of which, when I last installed Woody, it took about 5 - 10 minutes, and was the simplest installer I have used to install a linux distro for a while. I dont know what all the gripe is about Debians installer. As long as you can handle selecting what packages you want, and install a module for your network card (and if you can't do this, why are you running linux?) then I do not believe the Debian installer is a very hard installer to use.
All of this is coming from a Slackware user from way back.
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
hey if you can't write your own drivers, why are you running linux?
or
if you can't write your own shell scripts, why are you running linux?
Another bit of "silly user, linux is for real men", thinking.
It's not that Debain is extremely hard, it's not. It's just an attempt to make it more accessable to pepole who aren't as advanced as others.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Informative)
Debian users are not. If someone wanted to write and maintain a killer installer, I am quite sure Debian would embrace it.
However, Debian's installer, from potato on, has been quite easy to use. I usually install it across the network using a single floppy in about 20 minutes, and then install packages overnight via the network.
The 'slink' installer sucked rocks, and has given Debian installers a bad name.
Debian is a distro in which 99% of all the work is done by volunteers, and no one thinks writing installers is fun. That is why the Debian installer, while being easy to use and highly functional, is not pretty and flashy and come with the option of using the 'redneck' locale for installation prompts.
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
And people wounder why linux is not catching on quickly on the desktop...
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Why does it bother you that someone has re-written debian's installer (or replaced it)?
You obviously aren't going to use it, and I'm guessing you also are against anyone using on the dreaded "desktop".
and if you can't do this, why are you running linux?
Because it's about not having some fuck-head telling me what to run.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
The problem with debian's setup is that it leaves you with a system that requires a lot of manual configuration. If you've done it a couple of times it becomes routine but if you're encountering debian for the first time the installer is not very helpful (to not say very hostile).
It has no hardware detection, the default settings for X are inadequate in almost any case, you need to update all sorts of packages to more recent versions (which are not in stable) and most likely you also need to update the kernel. Not only is the network card not detected but you also need to manually configure other plug & play stuff such as sound cards, printers, scanners etc. Doing so is not easy in a bare bones linux installation and requires manually editing dozens of text based configuration files and running several non trivial commands (for plug and play devices that other linux distros configure automatically).
For some people that is the charm of debian. It gives you the feeling that you are in control and that you are a skilled sysadmin if you manage to get it all working.
libranet is a debian distribution? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Love it! (Score:2, Insightful)
I have been running it for 3 weeks without any problem.
The Pros:
-Great Control Panel, itll even recompile your kernel for you. I tried it, does a good job
-Install sets up your CD burner!
-A heck of a lot of packages on one cd
-even at 2.0 (what, did they skip a couple numbers =P) it came with really current packages
Cons:
-Old KDE and Gnome
Libranet has the ease of SUSE with the power of debian.
I have gotten 3 people on linux using libra.
I'm definitely staying with it (and I've tried out SuSe, RH, Mandrake, Slack, and Debian)
Re:Love it! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Love it! (Score:1)
don't worry about it (Score:2)
what's really concerning is that you are obviously a user and advocate of the OS, and their own developers are flaming you, when all they had to say was, "Version 2.7 comes with KDE xxx and Gnome xxx". But no, they decide to go the "stupid moron, what do you mean old" route.
Re:Love it! (Score:1)
Re:Love it! (Score:2)
Clue #1 he has been running it for 3 weeks
Clue #2 he specifically mentions it being version 2.0
trolling, eh? (Score:2)
pretty clear that Myuu is talking about version 2.0.
sorry about the "attack" thing, been a bad, bad day and flat text sometimes carries things it shouldn't.
Re:Love it! (Score:1)
Re:Love it! (Score:1)
Installation not so hard -- and not so important (Score:5, Insightful)
I've said this before. The Debian installation just isn't that hard. I'd like to hear some specific points about what makes it difficult other than that it isn't X based, but rather console based.
What I don't think is stressed often enough is that you only need to install Debian ONCE. I'm running it on several machines (home/business) and I haven't even had to reboot to upgrade.
apt-get dist-upgrade
Love it, love it, love it.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2, Insightful)
It asks the user for specific hardware modules to be used; most people don't know their NIC/audio/video chipsets offhand, and don't really want to. Modern Linux installers don't ask for such details, they figure it out for themselves and do the right things. Console/GUI is less important than the "what hardware module should I use? You tell me!" questions.
> What I don't think is stressed often enough is that you only need to install Debian ONCE. I'm running it on several machines (home/business) and I haven't even had to reboot to upgrade.
What's also not stressed often enough is that *any* OS install is a new-to-the-OS user's first impression. If that first impression goes well, there is a larger tolerance for whatever minor quirks occur later on - a larger well of goodwill available when problems crop up. If the install was a strain, then later problems may well cause a newbie to just give up, as they won't want to keep on having to be Such An Expert just to use a frickin' computer. Modern OSs also understand this.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
Debian *had* a good installer with Progeny. I don't know why it got canned, but I thought they (Debian) were going to use the Progeny installer?
I don't follow Debian closely, so someone correct me if I am wrong.
it takes some effort to get a workstation setup (Score:2)
The upgrading is definitely nice though.
Re:it takes some effort to get a workstation setup (Score:2)
Debian has had tasksel since before potato. You don't run dselect, you check the little box next to the X option, and you're done. I haven't run dselect during an install (or at all) in three years. Similarly there are little check boxes for Gnome, KDE, C/C++ development, DNS server, Apache, DHCP server, database stuff and lots more. Basically what you'd get with any distribution. Just say 'yes' when it asks if you want to run tasksel, and no when it asks you if you want to run dselect and you're set.
As for fonts, it used to be as simple as 'apt-get install msttcorefonts'. Now you need to actually have the font package [spineless.org] already on your system and unzipped before running the previously mentioned command.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
Second, the initial package selection systems are _really_ lacking. The simplified task-centered selection seemed like a good idea, but did not work in practice. As it is an old machine, I did not want X or any X applications on it, so I deselected that task. On the other hand, I did want developer stuff, so I selected that. Unfortunately, that resulted in it pulling down X and a lot of related stuff anyway. If there is supposed to be such a task division, it needs to be done well, or not at all. I then ended up in the app for individual package selection. I started to browse it - but hit Enter by mistake, and was dumped out of the program, without a warning and without a chance to undo the action. Not good.
So now I had a bare Woody install - really bare, like in "I need to apt-get less" bare. This was fine with me. For some reason, however, I had a 2.2 kernel. This both annoyed and surprised me, as Woody is supposed to use the 2.4 kernel. No problem - I just pull down a newer kernel package. Unfortunately, the newer kernel packages all had a pcmcia module package that was incompatible with the kernel itself.
I was about to get the kernel source and compile it for myself, but when rebooting to the 2.2 kernel (for the fifth or sixth time that day) I got a kernel panic when trying to boot the machine. As i had been at this for the better part of six hours, I gave up, got the Redhat boot disks, and got a functional, configured, X-less installation done with minimal fuss in two hours.
/Janne
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
I'm not sure how much better this could be done. A developers task that does not include a GUI library seems lacking; and GUI library will logically depend on X stuff.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
Presenting a choice that in fact is not doable is not the way to do it, however.
/Janne
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
I'm not sure I agree about the `no GUI library == lacking', but
It would be nice if there could be automatically-derived tasks, e.g., `install x-developer if the developer and x tasks are both selected'.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
If you choose the "Partition your hard disk" option, it will show you the filesystem type and size of existing partitions when it runs cfdisk. I consider the lack of partition lables a design flaw in the msdos partition table format. If you're using other patrition table types it will correctly show you the labels too.
Also, there is a bug with the installer that precludes a net install over pcmcia hardware with a fixed IP adress.
I just did this today and it worked fine. You must have experienced user error.
So now I had a bare Woody install - really bare, like in "I need to apt-get less" bare.
This is not an ideal solution, but it sounds like what you wanted was a bare system, plus the "build-essential" meta package. It will install all of the stuff you wanted (libc-dev, less, gcc, make, etc...) without X. If you want other non standard development libraries you'll still have to load them yourself, but it's a mere 'apt-get' away. The build-essential package is great for when you want a minimalist development environment without all the typing.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:5, Insightful)
build-essential does not include X, or anything X related. The text based installer is not forgiving to people who answer questions claiming to be an expert when they are really not. If you choose the expert options in the debian installer, and you are not a debian instalation expert, you will become lost and frustrated. This is poor social engineering on the part of the debian installer team, since most other installers require you to choose 'expert' to be able to configure things the way you want to and that causes people to claim that they are experts by default whenever they install software. If you'd like a more 'friendly' installer, you can try PGI, which is graphical, and superior to anything I've seen for any OS except suse. It is not the default installer for debian yet, but it works practically perfectly, and would likely satisfy you.
What distribution you use is personal perference, so I'm not really trying to sway you in either direction, but I would like people to know that your experience is not typical. Debian is not the right choice for everybody, but it is also not the technical nightmare that you are implying.
the supposedly superior apt system
Aah, noteriety through misunderstanding. Contrary to popular belief, it is neither apt, nor the
If apt hosed your system it is either because you were using a faulty mirror, you did something wrong, or you were using unstable.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
I've heard the "I tried installing Debian as my first distro because I heard it's good, but I could install it, gave up, and installed Redhat/Mandrake/SuSE.. then after a year when I became more experienced, I switched back to Debian" story quite a lot.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:1)
You have to know exactly which kernel modules to use for you ethernet card. Redhat autodetects. Debian doesn't autodetect or suggest any hardware.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
So I installed with a guess, and it was wrong, so the install was screwed and I had to do lots to fix it. Not at all pleasant.
In addition, today disk space is so cheap that, if you are installing from CD, you should just install everything that doesn't conflict and let people remove later. Don't give them a lot of questions to answer. Even an experienced user (now hitting my 25th year of use of Unix or something like it) gets tired of having to answer a lot of questions that in the end just don't matter.
And the inexperienced user is even more blessed if they don't have to answer those questions. If you can undo, if you can fix it later if you need to, then DON'T ASK. Or ask once if you the user wants to answer more detailed questions or wants a simple install.
Now since Debian network installs, I can see how you want to limit the load on servers, that is a point.
Plug and play is the way to go. If you can ever make it so the user can just plug it in, and it works, do it. Even if it's a bit slower. Does the user want DHCP or static IP? Don't ask the user, ask the DHCP server! Let them undo it later to static IP if they need it.
Host name, time zone, user name and partition style. That's about all that needs to be asked at install time.
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
Re:Installation not so hard -- and not so importan (Score:2)
More info (Score:3, Informative)
Linux distribution or food?? (Score:1)
Hmm...sounds like they started by trying to make some Canadian backbacon, eh?
Couldn't find any beer on their website, though...
Maybe I'm used to it (Score:1)
All I use is the first .iso image, edit apt sources by hand (uncommenting the first three), add in my network card's module, make sure I choose "advanced" instead of "simple" install, and I quit dselect as soon as I'm dumped into it (worthless, in my opinion). Every question is straightforward (cfdisk is easy, hostname, IP, gateway, dns, hit the enter key a bunch of times to install everything from the cd, enter root password, create user and then get to installing software)...
Of course, this leaves me with a ~60 to ~80meg OS, and I immediately apt up to sid and install anything I need. I like this method because I know there's little to nothing installed that I don't need.
First tell me what you're talking about. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:First tell me what you're talking about. (Score:3, Funny)
But it was easly solved with the "About Libranet" button on their main page..
(If I just copy/paste'd this about page [libranet.com] I would certainly get an "Informative" moderation point..
That obviously means it's not interesting :-) (Score:2)
Re:First tell me what you're talking about. (Score:3, Insightful)
Jon wrote in with news that Libranet 2.7 has been released. I've never tried Libranet, but Debian 3.0 is a fine, up-to-date OS with the usual Debian installation (harder than necessary), so if Libranet offers that Debian goodness with a better installer it should be an excellent choice for both experienced and newbie users.
If you can't figure out from the context that Libranet is a Debian based distro from this description- and then you went to the Libranet home page and couldn't figure it out- then you leave me w/questions as well. Questions like "How does someone this stupid figure out how to start a browser and get on the web?"
That Debian Goodness (Score:3, Insightful)
Prices (Score:3, Interesting)
Either way -- if I were going to purchase a new Linux distro, I would give this one a shot. With Debian "Clones" (storm, corel, etal) it has always been a bit of a catch-22, because you have all the power of apt-get, but apt-get is only as good as the updates (and frequency of said updates) waiting on the other end.
Re:Prices (Score:1)
The Libranet team provides good support and they are very nice people (hi Tal and Jon!). Also, the Libranet user community is very nice and friendly as well.
On the other hand, in this sort of economic climate, the upgrade price is a bit steep (USD $39.95 for the CDs). But you can also download the ISO for USD $10 less (USD $29.95). I don't think this is such a bad deal.
Personally, I'll probably wait a bit before I upgrade. I'm very happy with my Libranet 2.0 system at the moment and I don't really need KDE 3.0 and GNOME 2.0.
Libranet (Score:5, Informative)
There are other benefits as well. They have a package called XAdminmenu that logically groups many administration tools together, a control panel of sort, that is easy to use and properly annotated so that a new user can configure their system. There is also an active user community that is very newbie-friendly. Plus the support provided by their staff is exceptional and often goes beyond the offerings of other software firms.
Naturally there are also the benefits of being a Debian-based distribution. While they base their current release on Woody, you can easily bump it up to Sid if you wish too. And for new users, once they master APT (or Synaptic or GNOME-APT) they will be introduced to Linux with out the hassle of dependency hell. That is worth something right there.
In short, you get a slightly more polished version of Woody, with current software, support, and a pleasent Linux experience for very little dollars. That in itself is a bonus to our community.
For those that bitched: download the 2.0 iso from their site and give it a whirl, then give me your opinion. Otherwise be happy and stick to your distro of choice.
It's not hard to install (Score:2, Informative)
I hate how everybody always hates on the Debian installer. Seriously, when I first installed Debian (second distro, I was a newbie), I had no problem giving it the six disks, then having it download the packages I wanted, and configuring windowmaker. If people actually bothered to read the installation manual, they'll figure out that the step-by-step installation isn't hard. And if you have to maintain the same distribution for many different platforms and kernels, you can't use a pretty X11 installer, and you have to have the installer be modular.
This is not intended to be a flame at all, and I appricate everybody's feedback.
Cheers, Orange
Re:It's not hard to install (Score:2)
But I've given up in disgust more than once.
Progeny was easy (even if it did misconfigure ppp). LibraNet was easy (the a prior version). Only Debian has been such a PITA. They leave out monitor definitons. In 1999(?) I got a set of Debian disks (beta), and they had left out the definition for a Monitor that they'd defined in a prior set of disks. A ViewSonic G77(?) (not exactly a rare choice). They didn't have any ViewSonic Monitors listed, and when I looked at the update list, the most recent update to the monitors file was years earlier. My guess... someone who hadn't needed to configure his system in years burned the CDs. But they said Debian on the disks in big black letters....
Perhaps the problem is that there are no official Debian CDs. You buy CDs that someone has built. But since I need to get Debian that way, Debian gets the black eye. (I don't have a fast modem, and one of my computers doesn't have any working modem at all [it usually doesn't have a phone line, so a modem card seems an extravagance], so it's CDs for me.)
LibraNet solves this problem, among others. But even when the disks contain all the necessary files, I don't see why the Debian installer is so clunky. (Perhaps Progeny has/will have fixed this. Last time I installed Debian, I used the Progeny disks as a cheat [on a system that had a LAN connection rather than ppp... that doesn't work from Progeny], and the install, even with a broken system [the Progeny site is basically defunct] was a *lot* easier.)
Re:It's not hard to install (Score:2)
Re:It's not hard to install (Score:2)
So choose a vendor from that list, and make sure you buy your CDs from them next time.
Re:It's not hard to install (Score:2)
(I'm not pointing to a specific source mainly because I believe that they only burned what Debian provided them with.)
Re:It's not hard to install (Score:1)
The point is; the install manual doesn't help that much (especially when you don't have a connection to the net as was my case) for most new users (this is the case with most Linux documentation IMO).
Maybe I'm missing something obvious, but... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe I'm missing something obvious, but... (Score:1)
Yes, Libranet 2.7 is based on Debian Woody (3.0). This is mentioned on the features [libranet.com] page.
- Tal
debian is not uptodate (Score:1)
Re:debian is not uptodate (Score:1)
Re:debian is not uptodate (Score:2, Informative)
My Experiences... (Score:1, Informative)
1. I found their community to be very cold to newbies. (especially one certain user I don't care for but wont mention his name)
2. You have to pay every release for an upgrade...
3. They have no place where you can get a list of security advisories for their distrobution.
Re:My Experiences... (Score:1)
http://libranet.com/support.html
http://libran
Please, give it another try. The forum and mailing list is VERY newbie friendly.
Re:My Experiences... (Score:1)
Stormix (Score:1)
Still not ALSA sound. (Score:2)
AND console fb].
Yes of course I could install Alsa for the sound support, and yes of course Radeons are supported in the XFree 4.2.0, but it would not be any more (or less) convenient with "Libranet" than with stock Debian.
Before you criticize my choice of sound card, bear in mind that the Delta/Midiman cards are just about the ONLY serious choice for a pro card that works under linux. Perhaps there have been some 24/96 products released lately, but that would be big news to me.
Alas, the 2.5.33 kernel is almost the only thing needed, but, the Radeon framebuffer stuff is broken now. Maybe next week?
debian (Score:4, Interesting)
folks. there are other distros. use them instead.
I've come to believe that mandrake is the first distro you use, red hat is the second and then once you realize that you should be reading slashdot and other such sites and start hearing about debian and graducate to that. after debian you start thinking about trying linux from scratch. thats just the nature of the beast. I kind of like it that way.
Re:debian (Score:2)
I just think this is a natural progression for users. mandrake holds your hand more which is great. red hat gives you that feeling of big company to turn to, and debian has that sort of indier than thou flavor with a little apt-get thrown in for good measure.
Why bother? Do you fear Debian install? Why? (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm sure the Libranet folks have brewed up a mighty fine installer, but the fact is that Debian is not really very hard to install. Heck if you want to be safe about it, just add an extra hard drive to your system and have at it!
Possibly what takes time about Debian is totally customizing it to make it l337 just like you are, but unfortunately you just can't buy that kind of thing.
I'll tell you what, getting XFree86 up and running with 3.3.6 used to be a major hassle because the modelines were always wrong. XFree86 v 4.x is an incredible improvement in that it can autodetect your modes via a PnP monitor a lot of the times. Heck I have a GeForce2MX in my box and never made a single modeline! (And I get 125fps with QuakeForge!) The days of pain are over, I say!
Don't be fooled, Debian is not for total gnubies, unless they be exceptionally perseverent, but anybody with a smidgeon of Linux or Unix savvy should have few troubles with it. You need to know your network parameters, and it helps a lot if you know how to edit an XF86Config-4 file, but it isn't totally neccessary anymore like it used to be.
Non-English languages, accented characters (Score:2)
Debian does not deal correctly with diacritical-accented characters. Most applications are just OK, but Mozilla & Galeon are not. Also, there's not a decent graphical email that can do all of local mail, POP, news and IMAP at once. Evolution, for example, crashes; Mozilla mail, besides being too big and slow is useless due to not handling accents.
Moreover, the LANG environment variable doesn't always affect GDM, Gnome and several Gnome applications consistently. For example, Galeon always launches in English, but its second window opened will be localised.
I wonder if Libranet or any other Debian derivative, or even unstable, is better?
Re:Is this free? (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.linuxiso.org/distro.php?distro=31 [linuxiso.org]
Re:Is this free? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Is this free? (Score:1)
Re:Is this free? (Score:1)
Re:Is this free? (Score:2)
Remember, it's free as in speech, not beer.
Also keep in mind that they DO offer the last major version free, I think.
Re:Is this free? (Score:1)
Libranet Enhancements (Score:1)
Having a central system administration program is a BIG feature for anyone from a newbie to a seasons sysadmin. Having a good easy to use installer with hardware detection is important especially for people new to Linux, or those setting up lots of machines. You may have time to spend a few hours/days/months tweaking your system, but many people want a system that is ready to go as soon as it's installed.
People also argue, that hey, want up-to-date Debian, just use Debian unstable, get GNOME for experimental, KDE from another source, and XFree86 4.2 from yet another. True, IFF you are quite experienced at using the Debian packaging system, and willing to pick up the pieces when somthing breaks.
Libranet is designed to be a system ready to go from the moment the install is finished. No need to install extra packages, fight with hardware configuration, etc. At the same time it's Debian based so you have the power to do anything you want with your system and have the huge Debian archive as a ready to use resource.
- Tal a Libranet developer
Re:Libranet Enhancements (Score:1)
Re:Libranet Enhancements (Score:1)
Re:Libranet Enhancements (Score:1)
If users don't pay for it, the developers don't have any money to continue development. This isn't conjuncture, this is a fact. Development costs money, so without money there can be no distribution.
In the case of Debian, developers are either getting paid to work on Debian as part of their jobs, or they work in their free time. Bandwidth, hardware, etc. is all donated. In the case of Libranet funding needs to come from the users.
- Tal
Re:Libranet Enhancements (Score:1)
Re:Is this free? (Score:2)
Doesn't make any sense to me. I can't download it, I can't try it out... if I can't try it out, I won't buy it. I'm not gonna shell out cash for something without knowing what it's like - especially when there's freely downloadable alternatives.
I've bought Slackware (multiple versions, from Slackware 96 through to 8.1), and it's well worth the money.. during the time it wasn't up to snuff for Desktop use, I bought Mandrake.. both distros were downloaded first, and bought later.
They also say that they want 100,000 users in 3 months.
And I want a toilet made out of solid gold, but some things just aren't in the cards.
If they want to increase their user base, they need to make ISO's available for download.
Re:Is this free? (Score:1)
Re:Is this free? (Score:1)
Grr. It's not up to you how they distribute it, that is my point.
And worry about == and = if you want but until the the "three bar equal sign" is on my keyboard, I'm gonna do what i want.
Re:Is this free? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:I hope 2.7 fixes the bugs (Score:1)
Re:yes, but it still infringes copyrights (Score:1)
Thanks for making me laugh.
Xandros? (Score:2)
.
Re:Who cares? (Score:1)
Re:Who cares? (Score:1)
I work for a very large medical diagnostics company and we are in the process of removing some Windows 2000 servers and replacing them with Linux servers. It's going to save the company that I work for millions of dollars.
Hell of a toy, huh?
Re:No Free Download? (Score:3, Insightful)
but no, the GNU license doesn't require you to be able to download it for free. it only states that if you get the binaries from them, they have to provide the source at cost of media.
so if you don't get the binary distro from libranet, they have no reason to give you the source.
what I don't understand, is why the first person to get the binaries and source, doesn't just post it on linuxiso or something. libranet can't really stop them, because the GPL also grants the right to redistribute.
anyway...
Re:No Free Download? (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/li
It may just be a matter of time.
Download the 2.0 version and upgrade? (Score:2)
Re:Download the 2.0 version and upgrade? (Score:2)
from experience, this list can include:
gnome
kde
kernel
libc
gcc
which have so many nasty circular dependencies... apt-get upgrade all doesn't really get the job done for this complex of a maneuver.
plus, you also upgrade for having the system automatically detect more of your hardware. in this case, IDE soundcards, to begin with.
admittedly, if you're a debian hacker, you can go with 2.0. but if you're a debian hacker, you're just installing debian, anyway.
Re:No Free Download? (Score:1)
Re:Ya. (Score:1)
Look mods, this wasn't meant as a flame. It's the truth.