Mandrakesoft Releases 10.1 Beta1 142
Theanswriz42 writes "MandrakeSoft has announced the release of Mandrake Linux 10.1 Beta1 which is available from one of the many mirrors or from bittorrent. xorg is now the standard and there are many other changes from the previous version of Mandrake Linux. Screenshots are available here."
Mandrake is good (Score:5, Funny)
There, I got half of the comments out of the way.
Re:Mandrake is good (Score:2)
I like Mandrake... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I like Mandrake... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Hope it fixes xfree problem (Score:2, Offtopic)
It's not a problem... (Score:3, Funny)
Am downloading to have a look... (Score:5, Insightful)
I always get excited about new releases. Linux's constantly increasing numbers make me feel like things are always getting better, which is usually the case.
By contrast, every new MS release makes me scared about what they're sneaking in this time - activation, DRM, Trusted Computing...
Re:Am downloading to have a look... (Score:5, Funny)
3 -> 95 -> 2000 -> XP!
(XP is Roman for really huge)
Emotional Release (Score:2)
Re:Am downloading to have a look... (Score:1)
whereas MS's new releases mostly serve just to extract more money and force non-uninstallable software on users which would otherwise never be touched.
sure this is all just my opinion. maybe other people don't feel content using something that didn't cost hundreds of $currency. but if you take away opinions ther
Not being snuck in... (Score:2)
We often don't have as much info about the latest and greatest Linux distro release...
And yes I know you can 'use the source', but really, who has time to audit their OS + tools + apps ? ( or how many users even would understand what they are reading, written in several different languages, and millions of lines of code.. )
That being said, I also trust that something sinister will be caught, by
Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:4, Interesting)
I look forward to trying out 10.1 beta....
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:1)
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:2)
2.6 adds features and size, a double-edged sword..but then again, floppies need to be deprecated anyway.
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:3, Informative)
Don't be too disappointed if the shiny new beta has issues which make it a non-starter for you.
Mandrake disappointed me. (Score:1)
I upgraded my Dell Inspiron 5150 from Mandrake 9.2 to Mandrake 10. The first few things I noticed upon upgrading were:
Come on, people. How hard is it to ship a distro without glaring fuckups?
Linux geeks easily dismiss people who find Linux difficult to use as luse
Re:Mandrake disappointed me. (Score:2)
This is something I wouldn't expect someone who was inexperienced with Linux to know, but a couple of years ago, many Linux distributions (and Mandrake was certainly one of them) were appallingly unreliable when you chose the "Upgrade" option of the install. Usually, you'd be better off backing up
It is disappointing to see that nothing much has changed there.
In a business, chances are tha
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:2, Interesting)
I've been a heavy user of MS products since 3.1, and have toyed with Linux on home server and desktop setups.
Mandrake 10 was the first distro that had no trouble with the hardware on my laptop. After changing one boot option to enable ACPI and get sound working, it was flawless.
I now dual-boot XP and Mandrake on my laptop, and it's great. I'm learning quickly as I use Linux, and at this point I only keep XP around for games and work -- My Samsung VI660 USB phone doesn't seem to like Linux, and I c
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:2)
I found this [reviewtvs.com] auction for a data cable for it, and it said it would work with Linux. BTW, what are you using the data cable for? Contact transfer, or internet access? Seeing as the A660 ISN'T a camera phone, it wouldn't be that...
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:2)
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:1)
I'm aware of the rule. I bought the phone because the rep told me I could connect through vision with my laptop. I called Sprint when I read about users getting in trouble for it, and chewed them out royally for not telling their reps to lay off. I told them that I'd renewed my contract and bought the phone based on that info. This got me escalated all the way to the manager (who was on his way out of the office).
He explained the situation... that they can't let people willy-nilly use
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:2)
Re:Mandrake Impresses Me... (Score:2)
FB= First Bug!! (ipod mini and 4g ipod) (Score:5, Informative)
Other than that, mandrake rocks. viva la mandrake.
(its bug 10619 if anyone cares..)
Re:FB= First Bug!! (ipod mini and 4g ipod) (Score:3, Insightful)
Coward.
Re:FB= First Bug!! (ipod mini and 4g ipod) (Score:1)
Because there would be bugs everywhere.
jaj mandrake (Score:4, Interesting)
The nicest thing about all that? well when it becomes Release 10.1 you just update sources and wait for urpmi to end rpming...
Done this since MDK 8.2, no new CD installs just update. Now MS beat that
To hell with Karma spoilers...
Re:jaj mandrake (Score:1)
What in the hell does that mean?
Re:jaj mandrake (Score:5, Informative)
Those rpm-packages are mirrored in ftp servers around the world.
A ftp server that mirrors Mandrake rpm-packages, also contains an "index file" (hdlist.cz) with meta-information about those packages.
A ftp server with Mandrake rpm-packages plus this "index file" is called a "package source" in "Mandrake speak"
From Mandrake Control Center, you can configure "rpmdrake/urpmi" to install packages from a "package source", pretty much like Debian uses apt-get and FedoraCore uses Yum.
"rpmdrake/urpmi" are: the core "classic rpm" plus perl scripts that solve "dependency hell" . One (rpmdrake) is a GUI tool, the other (urpmi) is the text-based tool under rpmdrake's hood.
To Upgrade a Mandrake from version n to n+1, go to Mandrake Control Center, change rpm-package sources so now point to new Mandrake release, and then, do a "update packages" to upgrade all packages and end with new Mandrake version.
I hope this makes clear what he said..
Peace!
Yum Frontend (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:2)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:2)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:2)
Granny can either go to the Control Center to install software with a pretty GUI or double click on an rpm and watch a pretty GUI open.
And by the way, Granny does not install software. She calls good old grandson who connects remotely from home while asking Granny how the cat's doing and installs the app before she can say "come over for some chocolate cookies".
Dude, stop spreading disinformation. It is not helping anyone.
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:1)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:5, Informative)
Just associate 'gurpmi' with the mime type for RPM in your favorite web browser.
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:2)
I haven't used mandrake in I don't know how many years. I'm just asking questions so people in the open source community realize the little things need to change to make it much easier to use Linux.
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:3, Informative)
In my Mandrakelinux 10.0-Oficial:
I just opened the file browser (konqueror), clicked on a src.rpm (source rpm) icon, I got a GUI dialog that asked for root password and then I got a dialog that asked me:
------QUOTE----------
You have selected a source package:
You probably didn't want to install it on your computer (installing it
would allow you to make modifications to its sourcecode then compile it).
What would you like to do
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:2)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:1)
Re:Yum Frontend (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as clicking on an rpm and installing and resolving dependencies automatically, that also has been the default behavior for a long time.
Upgrading using URPMI (Score:2)
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:4, Informative)
2.go to http://urpmi.org/easyurpmi/index.php and set up sources for the release you want to upgrade to
3.urpmi --auto-select --force
done, but if you want a new kernel
4.urpmi kernel (pick the one you want)
5.reboot
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:1)
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:5, Informative)
A safer way [Note 1]:
1. Exit graphical environment and go to console (Ctrl-Alt-F1)
2. login as root and switch to runlevel 3 (telinit 3)
3. urpmi.removemedia -a
4. go to http://urpmi.org/easyurpmi/index.php and set up sources for the release you want to upgrade to
5. urpmi --test urpmi (test if urpmi's upgrade works) [Note 2]
6. urpmi urpmi (if you get no errors in previous step)
7. urpmi --auto --auto-select --test (we want to make sure upgrade will work. If you have non-official rpms, this could cause trouble. Write down offending rpms/files, remove them and try again) [Note 3]
8. urpmi --auto --auto-select
9. urpmi kernel
10. reboot
[Note 1] This could not work if:
* you have used "--force" before to install packages
* you install rpms from untrusted origin
* you install rpms not specific for Mandrake
* you install with "./configure && make && make install" instead of using "./configure && make && checkinstall"
[Note 2]: the --test option is great because:
i. it downloads all needed rpm-packages
ii. it tests the installation and provide quite clear error messages
iii. it does *not* delete downloaded rpm-packages
iv. it does *not* change your current programs.
v. when happy and you do not use "--test", as all the packages are already downloaded, your upgrade takes less time.
[Note 3]: If you get a message like "Packge foobar cannot be installed because it conflicts with file
Peace!
(upgrading Mandrake with urpmi since 8.1)
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:1)
But I'm sure YOU can post some insightful instructions on how to do it...
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:2)
Wow, linux really IS ready for the desktop! That was so much easier than "click here for windows update"
1. your "windows update" only does bugfixing
2. You have one-click "MandrakeUpdate" for bug-fixing
3. The above mentioned steps are meant to upgrade the whole OS + programs to its newest version, on a live system. It's not easy-peasy because you are potentially updating +8,000 programs.
4. You cannot upgrade from Windows 2000 to Windows 2003, plus all your programs installed in a "Windows Computer" usi
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:1)
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:3, Informative)
You use the software sources manager, uncheck your current sources first, then add new sources for 10.x. First thing you do from the commandline is 'urpmi urpmi' then 'urpmi --auto-select'. You may have to make some choices along the way but eventually you'll end up with 10.x. Don't forget to 'urpmi kernel' also, as it may not update you to the newest one (which is a failsafe built into urpmi).
Re:Upgrading using URPMI (Score:3, Informative)
Seems to work quite good, but for some reason I can't intall galeon or epiphany.
Vicious revenue cycle. (Score:2, Insightful)
WTF? (Score:1)
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
And how many other distros have you seen packaged with ANYTHING? When's the last time you bought a Soyo motherboard or a Dell laptop with a copy of SuSE? Never. That's why it's an accomplishment. Get an account so people can mod you to zero instead of starting with it, jerk.
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
Compaq^H^H^H^H^H HP and Carrefour ship computers with Mandrake Linux installed.
Peace!
Re:Vicious revenue cycle. (Score:1, Interesting)
Awe Damn (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Awe Damn (Score:2)
Dup (Score:1)
Nevermind [Re:Dup] (Score:2)
Desktop (Score:2)
Re:Desktop (Score:2, Informative)
(and then eat it, your words that is)
CCB
Re:Desktop (Score:1)
back to Mandrake. It's slightly more of a pain with Mandrake to install
bleeding edge stuff (except for major apps like Mozilla, which are both easy
and straightforward), and you spend slightly more time hunting down where
the distribution puts things, but I found that for me, Gentoo outweighed its
advantages in those areas with some disadvantages of its own.
Foremost, things just aren't as well integrated with Gentoo, in terms of the
wa
Re:Desktop (Score:2)
3.141 (Score:2, Insightful)
Be a little more specific. Best Linux desktop for what?
Re:3.141 (Score:2)
1. Do you want "distro-optimized" software?
Yes - 2
No - 4
2. Do you like
Gnome - Fedora
KDE - 3
3. Do you like
Rock Solid - SuSE
Latest'n'Greatest - Mandrake
4. Do you like to compile?
No - 5
Yes - 6
5. Do you have a good overview when to
update your system's software for
bugfixes etc?
Yes - Slackware
No - Debian
6. Do you have a good overview of when to
update your system's software for
bugfixes etc?
Yes - Linux from Scratch
Re:Desktop (Score:2)
there is no best (Score:2)
Re:Desktop (Score:3, Informative)
Mandrake 10 is very, very good. My only qualm with it has been PMCIA support for Wifi cards. Other than, it is very fast and very stable.
It's multimedia "readiness" is superb.
Google for easy urpmi, then add plf and contrib repositories and you have thousands of applications at your fingertips.
urpmi libdvdcss
After that, getting DVDs to play out of the box is as easy as putting a DVD in the drive.
Getting mplayer installed with all the fancy cod
A beta (Score:1)
Re:A beta (Score:2, Funny)
For the fun of it, it would be better if there was a bottle of red wine included.
Well, they both are included (Score:3, Informative)
garlic
$ urpmq -i garlic
Name : garlic
Version : 1.4
Release : 1mdk
Group : Sciences/Chemistry
Size : 2197558 Architecture: i586
Summary : Free molecular viewer and editor
And of course,
urpmq -y wine
libwine1
libwine1-capi
libwine1-devel
li
linuxconf
wine
wine-utils
xwine
Cheers, from Paris.
1st 10 OS version? (Score:2)
Re:1st 10 OS version? (Score:1)
If I'm not mistaken the latest one is OS X 10.4?
Re:1st 10 OS version? (Score:1)
In a word, no.
> I know there is MacOS X, but that's kind of randomly chosen name (more
> than a version number), no?
Lesse, there was System 6, System 7, MacOS 8, MacOS 9, then Mac OS X, which
was at first 10.0 then 10.1 then 10.2 then 10.3 and soon 10.4. Looks like a
number to me.
Nor was Mac the first OS to hit double-digit version numbers, and I think
Solaris was there before Mandrake. Heck, Emacs is at version 21 now
DUPE! (Score:2)
http://linux.slashdot.org/article.pl?s
Don't bother with the screenshots (Score:3, Interesting)
If you've never seen Mandrake before, you might want to go ahead and look, but for anybody else it's pretty much a waste of time. Plus it's hell on LinuxBeta's servers.
That said, a quick question for anybody who has installed this beta: Does Mandrake still use devfs, or have they finally moved to udev? That was one of my disappointments when I tried 10 Community.
Re:Don't bother with the screenshots (Score:2)
Dual boot fix? (Score:1)
Blew away the MBR and almost had to reinstall until I found the "dd" trick that allows you to rewrite it.
In any case, I fixed it by partitioning manually and loading from the NTLDR in Windows.
Still haven't fixed the control center (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Still haven't fixed the control center (Score:1)
Beta Fatigue (Score:1, Interesting)
Putting aside the politics, sometimes one needs things to just work so one can attend all the other things called 'a life' ahem...
Re:Why is this frontpage news ? (Score:1)
Re:Why is this frontpage news ? (Score:1)
Re:Why is this frontpage news ? (Score:1)
so why doesn't an improving alternative OS count?
Re:Why is this frontpage news ? (Score:1)
Re:You know (Score:1)
Re:Why are no news like this news? (Score:1)
Would news about the final release be newsworthy?
Perhaps.
Is news about Beta 1 newsworthy? I just can't see why would it be.
Re:Ohhh, Mandrake Linux! (Score:1)
Fantastic!
Just a shame my soundcard/modem/ethernet/graphics cards arent supported at all.
Ho-hum, back to Linux.