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Mandriva Businesses Data Storage

GlobeTrotter: Mandrake-based 40GB Linux Mobile Desktop 199

joestar writes "Mandrakesoft & LaCie have just launched "GlobeTrotter", a ultra-compact 40 GB bootable USB hard-drive pre-loaded with Mandrakelinux 10.0 Official. It may be plugged to any available PC with a USB 1 or USB 2 port, automatically recognizes the host-PC's hardware, and then is ready to use. Multiple uses can be imagined, from the office/internet workstation to the multimedia jukebox! The concept is quite similar to Mandrakemove, excepted that it's way more powerful than a USB-key based system! And for $219 it's a credible alternative to a laptop."
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GlobeTrotter: Mandrake-based 40GB Linux Mobile Desktop

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  • by Kell_pt ( 789485 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:41PM (#10099084) Homepage
    It's not really an alternative to a laptop imho - check its weight. Always recall that transportable doesn't make it portable. ;)
    • by Chess_the_cat ( 653159 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:47PM (#10099131) Homepage
      It's not really an alternative to a laptop imho

      Maybe because it's not a laptop. It's a HD with Mandrake preloaded onto it. You plug it into a desktop so you can run Mandrake anywhere.

    • I think the bigger problem is that you need host hardware and therefore can't use it in the train, on a bench or wherever else you'd use a laptop...
      • by Arathrael ( 742381 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @06:01PM (#10099240)
        I suppose it's a credible alternative to a laptop if the only thing you use the laptop for is working at both home and work.

        Just have a machine without hard drive at each location and take the usb drive.

        Otherwise, yes, you could hardly rely on there being available host hardware without password-protected BIOS setups available wherever you want to use it. :-)
        • by h4rm0ny ( 722443 ) * on Saturday August 28, 2004 @06:49PM (#10099466) Journal

          I'm not sure on the speeds you'd get across USB2, but this is also USB1 compatible and I don't think you'd want your swap mounted on it. Nope, you're right and you don't need to qualify it. This is no alternative to a laptop.

          And if the purpose of it was to have portability of software and data, well I have an email client running from a pen-drive and it also stores a few spreadsheets and Word documents. I've not found much else I actually need to carry from computer to computer for rountine work.

          I'd say the best use for this is demoing a linux system to clients.
    • I like my linux desktop for work. Sadly I don't always got the choice to install it on work machines. With this I can turn any windows machine into my desktop. Exactly as I got it at home including all those usefull utilities.

      Pretty smart. I could of course lug my own laptop around but that is a lot more expensive and you will be working on a laptop. Not a high end pc.

      This is more like knoppix but with its own HD for easy storage of preferences and adding new applications.

  • by ryane67 ( 768994 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:42PM (#10099091)
    to hijack data off a system that you dont have the password to log into yourself..
    • You've been able to do that with a Knoppix CD for quite a while, so that isn't anything new.
    • by jeffkjo1 ( 663413 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:53PM (#10099173) Homepage
      Yea, I love supposedly 'password protected' XP/2000 user login directories are wide open for the viewing in linux. Thanks knoppix!
      • by Proc6 ( 518858 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @06:20PM (#10099340)
        Enable file system encryption on NTFS and try again.
        • by Anonymous Coward
          Use the following steps to get around the encrypted NTFS folder/drive.

          Use a Win2K drive with l0phtCrack (LC5)
          Hack the target drive Administrator password
          Remove Win2K drive
          Boot Windows with Admin password.
          Reset user password (with the NTFS encryption).
          Login with hacked user.
          Remove NTFS encryption.
          Copy decrypted contents to your Win2K drive.

          • by Anonymous Coward
            That doesn't work if the user is an Active Directory user. The local administrator cannot reset an AD user.
      • Yea, I love supposedly 'password protected' XP/2000 user login directories are wide open for the viewing in linux. Thanks knoppix!

        Remember, if someone with reasonable IT skills gets to sit in front of a machine with no-one watching, and has bootable media, it isn't that hard for them to get full access to the system. If the files are all encrypted the password file can still be taken away and cracked over time.

        I've had a few things delivered where the vendor didn't supply the root password (probably sound

        • Remember, if someone with reasonable IT skills gets to sit in front of a machine with no-one watching, and has bootable media, it isn't that hard for them to get full access to the system. If the files are all encrypted the password file can still be taken away and cracked over time.

          Unless the admin is l33t enough to know that you can disable booting from anything but the hard drive from the BIOS, and keep this setting from being changed with a BIOS password.

          Of course you can always (break) open the c

          • Unless the admin is l33t enough to know that you can disable booting from anything but the hard drive

            Every admin knows that, but most prefer physical security. When you have a failure and can't get the password you have a paperweight, which is OK if it's only a PC - or OK if a few people have the BIOS passwords and it's also kept in a safe place offsite. In today's IT market you cannot assume that you will be in any one place for the life of the hardware, or even that the hardware will remain on site. Tha

    • Yes and no. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by hotspotbloc ( 767418 )
      Sounds like an easy way to hijack data off a system that you dont have the password to log into yourself.

      Very true unless there's no hard drive in the workstation. If everyone using it is also using this external HD one wouldn't be needed.

    • If the system administrators are smart, they'll password protect the BIOS settings and only allow the hard drive to boot. Not floppy. Not CD. Not USB. Yes, you can reset the BIOS password, but it requires more than hitting the power button and plugging something in.
      • by Nyder ( 754090 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @07:01PM (#10099524) Journal
        drawfour says "Yes, you can reset the BIOS password, but it requires more than hitting the power button and plugging something in."

        yes, all you need is a command prompt (msdos boot disk) then type:
        DEBUG

        and hit Enter. You'll see a dash (-) at the DEBUG prompt. Now type:

        o 70 2e

        which will show as -o 70 2e at the DEBUG prompt. Hit Enter. Then type:

        o 71 ff

        and hit Enter. Finally type:

        Q

        that is one of the ways, there are a few others. don't work in all situations, but will work in most i've had to deal with.
        • How do you boot from a DOS boot disk if you can't boot from anything but the hard drive?
        • Did this procedure work with any ThinkPads, as far as you can recall? I don't want to trash our company's laptop while doing this.
    • So the old maxim holds true yet again: Once an attacker has physical access to the target, all you can do is sit back and watch the pwnage. Or trigger the halon. It kinda depends on your situation.
  • YAY (Score:3, Insightful)

    by umpa ( 38894 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:43PM (#10099094)

    I think this is great. Not only can you take along your preferred operating system, but your files, too.

    Maybe my hardware is old, but can most boxes boot off USB these days?

    • yes.
    • Re:YAY (Score:3, Informative)

      by ryanjensen ( 741218 )
      The drive comes with a mini-CD containing a bootloader and a recovery program. So if your hardware can at least boot off CD, it can use the LaCie drive.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    How is this different from just using a regular external hard drive? My roomate has installed Mac OS X on his iPod and exclusively uses that as his mobile platform. Just find a Mac and plug it in.

    • OSX has better support for functions like this. Not only does most apple hardware that can run OSX support firewire booting, but also the operating system itself stores all custom configuration data in the user's home directory under ~/Library. So, if you just want a roaming home directory on an external hard drive that's really easy to do, assuming you stick to built-in apps.

      However, in this case the end-user is completely booting Mandrake from the external USB drive, much like you would boot Knoppix fr
    • Certainly a good way to go, if you have the convenience of a Mac wherever you go, but for general day-to-day travel, be it work, or friends' houses, etc, you tend to find that you're far more likely to encounter a PC; not much use for a copy of OSX in that event.

      Not to mention the fact that if you encounter a Mac, chances are that Mac OS X will already be on it; there isn't much point in booting into a *different* copy of OS X just to sit and surf the net or other tasks. You could just use the existing sys
    • It run Linux you insensitive clod !

      Seriously this as been possible for years now, the news is that a company is selling it.
  • Costly? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rpbailey1642 ( 766298 ) <robert.b.prattNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:45PM (#10099114)
    After reading the article, I wonder what exactly makes it so special? Perhaps the convenience of the entire setup, but for 40 gig, you would expect a lower price. I can get a USB enclosure for a hard drive for $30.00 here [xpcgear.com] or perhaps elsewhere for even less. A 200 gig HD from tigerdirect.com is $89.99. Don't get me wrong, I am really excited to see Linux systems set up like this, but the price kind of threw me off.
    • Re:Costly? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by precogpunk ( 448371 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:51PM (#10099161) Journal
      You are paying more because Mandrake needs to:
      1. Secure a steady supply of hardware to meet demand.
      2. Install and configure the OS on the hardware.
      3. Write a manual.
      4. Provide tech support for the product.
      5. Market the new product.
      6. Profit.
    • This seems just like any of the other marketing blurbs /. has hosted lately... Oh well..

      The default theme mandrake comes with is ugly too... :/
    • Re:Costly? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Rakishi ( 759894 )
      I assume they use a mobile (ie 2.5") hd so that the enclosure can be powered by usb. Those aren't all that cheap compared to normal hds.
    • Re:Costly? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by aclarke ( 307017 ) <spam.clarke@ca> on Saturday August 28, 2004 @06:18PM (#10099324) Homepage
      I couldn't see right away from their web site, but I'm 99% positive they're using a 2.5" laptop drive. So a better comparison would be something like a 40GB Drive for $100 [outpost.com]

      Just so you know, every 3.5" drive enclosure I've ever seen requires a separate power supply. 3.5" disks require too much power to be reliably run from USB or firewire. This is one reason why a 2.5" drive solution is much better for portability.

      So, take $130 of hardware and add $90 for my time to put the drive in the enclosure, install Mandrake, etc. and it doesn't seem like such a bad deal to me.

      • First off, complete usb pocket drives go for $90.
        Check pricewatch. This is before bulk discounts.
        Second, $90 for your work. How? I can buy assembled
        usb drive for $90 and now I just write a little
        script to format and rawrite the drive. None of
        this requires any thinking so even in the US it
        would be a minimum wage job to plug drives into
        USB and press a button, then package. So more
        realistically $5 for putting Mandrake on it.
        If they give you Mandrake support with it then that
        could be worth $40. So I think a fai
    • I guess Mandrake uses a mobile drive so that it can be powered via the USB port in most cases. Also, you're paying for the Porsche Design, if you like it or not...

      Now we should be waiting for standard hard drives that come with Linux preinstalled-this could be a great boost to Linux acceptance.
  • speed ??? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by selderrr ( 523988 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:46PM (#10099126) Journal
    With USB2, its feasible, but I surely wouldn't boot off a USB1 device unless realy no other options are available. Or the machine has so much ram, I barely acces my swap.
  • read that as "Multiple users can be imagined"?

    because a drive that imagines users to use it would probably make for a better selling product than a mobile USB drive.

  • by Myself ( 57572 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:51PM (#10099163) Journal
    I've never seen "USB" as an option in the "A, C, CDROM" selections in any BIOS setup program I've ever touched. Is it handled somewhere else, or is it just very rare among ~1-year-old hardware?

    Carrying along a bootable CD and a USB storage device sort of defeats the purpose.

    Loadlin would be a natural for this thing...
    • Maybe the super-new ones *might* have this option - but not any of them I've seen and I've seen some brand new (past month) boards.

      It sure will be sweet when this is mainstream; boot up a copy of whatever OS and do some troubleshooting or virus removal. Or even just some easy file copies.

    • by interiot ( 50685 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @06:47PM (#10099449) Homepage
      It doesn't completely defeat the purpose:
      • If the CD only needs to boot, load USB drivers, and hand off control to the USB drive, it can be shrunk to a business-card CD. I'm guessing that a business-card CD + 2.5" hard drive isn't any less convenient than one full-size CD.
      • With 40GB available, you can have 58 times [google.com] as many programs available as you can with a 700MB CD.
      • Hard drives can be written to as well as read from, so you can use it to carry documents and MP3s along with you, and don't have to stream these over the network like you'd have to with Knoppix.
      In short, it's waaaaay more functional than a bootable CD.
      • With 40GB available, you can have 58 times [google.com] as many programs available as you can with a 700MB CD.

        If we're talking typical case (knoppix) then since the harddrive likely won't be compressed, its only a matter of 20 times as many programs.

        Moving on to the days of DVDs things are going to get even less impressive in that regard...
      • One problem with those mini CDs, though - if you encounter a machine with a slot-load drive that can't boot off of USB, you can't boot the drake installation.

        Well, you can try, but one would be an idiot to put any other than a full sized CD/DVD in a slotload drive - it may go in, but it probably isn't coming back out.
      • Even better, encrypt the filesystem and put the key on the CD so that it performs as just that, a key, to limit access to the thing. Would be the same as setting a BIOS password for a notebook to avoid information theft, only that it would actually work if your encryption is strong enough. Shouldn't be a too big performance hit, either.
    • by Guppy06 ( 410832 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @09:42PM (#10100353)
      "I've never seen "USB" as an option in the "A, C, CDROM"

      You young whipper-snappers with your "CD-ROM boot" and your "network boot" are all a bunch of sissies and don't know it! Why, back in my day you were given one option: floppy drive! Hard drives were too expensive and required a team of oxen to get the durned things spinning, so everything was on a truckload of floppy disks.

      And when I say floppy, I mean floppy! Those things were flopper than you were when you walked in on your grandmother and I this morning! Have you ever tried putting a pancake into a disk drive?

      Them rich snots down the street, they had one of them new-fangled "double density" drive. Managed to get PC-DOS down to less than half a dozen disks (unless you included GW-BASIC!). Us, we were stuck with single sided, single density. Do you have any idea how many of those it takes to fit just one Library of Congress on? Station wagons full!

      "Network boot..." bah! We had a network! It didn't just look like a garden hose, it was a garden hose! We'd roll one of our floppy disks up and shove it in and blow it on through to our friends in order to share our music files!

      You ever hear Asia being played by your internal speaker, boy?
      • El Torito is still a black voodoo kludge if you ask me. It's a miracle bootable CDs work at all.

        I've heard quite a lot played through the internal speaker, there was a program called "pianoman" which included a large library of tunes. Find it in the Simtel archive.

        Hint: You didn't need your OS to include BASICA / GWBASIC if you had a real IBM, since it was in ROM and would start if no bootable media were found. Others who ripped IBM's boot code but couldn't steal BASIC because of copyright would fail with
    • it usually appears there only if you've got something plugged already in.

      and then it's just completely missing from some, but some fairly 'old' computers have the option while some a bit more modern don't.
  • Presumably this is only for newer motherboards that can boot off USB.
  • by nherc ( 530930 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:54PM (#10099189) Journal
    And for $219 it's a credible alternative to a laptop.
    Yeah, if you can find a laptop to plug it into...

    Perhaps it's a credible alternative to a remote login to your main computer. You are still going to need to find an existing computer to plug this thing into though.

  • by gexen ( 123248 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:55PM (#10099197)
    First off, I think it's great that a distribution is doing this. If you're a Linux evangelist, I would imagine a Live-CD may not do everything you want to do.

    But, the main point of this post is to ask how is this a viable alternative to a laptop? I always defined viable alternative as a product that offers a similiar product set designed to do the same job. How exactly is a hard drive loaded with Linux comprable to a laptop?
  • by untaken_name ( 660789 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @05:56PM (#10099204) Homepage
    There is no way that an external hard drive is equivalent to a laptop. This thing doesn't have a keyboard or screen. What are you going to do on the plane, show it off to the other passengers? Viable alternative. mutter.
    • by jhoger ( 519683 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @07:02PM (#10099526) Homepage
      Myself, I gave up on modern "portables" some time back. Battery life sucks so bad, they always need to be plugged in. They heat up like a mo-fo. The keyboards invariably suck. And their hard drives are serious underperformers.

      Since I need to plug in anyway, as a contractor, when I need to go on-site, I take my Shuttle XPC in a little cart, with a real buckling-spring UNICOMP keyboard. It's got 2GB of RAM and a fast CPU, can run VMWare handily so I can launch Winders from my Debian system as necessary.

      I just use the monitor at whatever desk the client decides to assign me for the day.

      If I carry a laptop any more it's a Tandy Model 102, and I just use it for editing text. Now that thing is portable... 20 hours on 4 AA batteries, passes the drop test, and has an excellent keyboard. I transfer files to/from via the serial port.

      We're working on a memory/flash storage expansion for it at http://bitchin100.com/remem_project.html

      -- John.
      • Ahh, Bitchin100 earned a bookmark :) I use mine for more than editing text though, it's a handy little serial terminal for all sorts of tasks. (I seem to have lost the picture of mine plugged into the console port of an oc-192 terminal with the config prompt up.)

        Look for an older, larger laptop with option bays that'll accept batteries. Consider that the machine load-shares between them, so the demand from each individual battery is lower, which makes them more efficient. (Two batteries, each of which runs
      • Consider a Pentium M based laptop. The laptops that suck are usually based on desktop Pentium 4 chips, those are the kind that sucks batteries and the CPU burns hot like a fire, because they weren't meant to be put into a laptop, period.

        Several models can take 2GB of RAM, and can be had with 2MB cache and a 2GHz clock rate. Being P6-based means that it has a good instructions per cycle (IPC) unlike Pentium 4 chips. You can get efficient laptop hard drives that still run at 7200 RPM.
      • You have some excellent points, but I think the one about the keyboard is unfair, at least towards ThinkPads. I am no IBM lover, but the ThinkPad has a damn fine keyboard. I feel as confortable with it as I do with a full desktop keyboard, sometimes more so.

        But, I still have to find a laptop that won't fry my nuts when used as the name implies...
      • I just use the monitor at whatever desk the client decides to assign me for the day.

        How do you configure X to work with any random monitor? I've been trying to do something similar.
  • ...to grab the entire contents of a G5 at the Apple Store.
  • by astrojetsonjr ( 601602 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @06:29PM (#10099386)
    40 GB laptop disk $84 - Bascon Computers
    USB 2 case (with keyboard power cable for those PC's with lame USB ports) $32 - Bascon Computers
    Knoppix $0 - the web
    Portability Priceless

    Fits in your pocket, you can carry your system all the time. Most places are starting to care about USB drives so check before you plug in.

    The nice thing is you always have your code, your custom toolchain, music, etc. Like you never left home.

    (OK, so you have to set up Knoppix and that will take an hour or two, far less than it takes you to build that XP box from scratch) - ob Windows vs. Linux dig

  • Umm i dont think so.. to be an alternative it would need a keyboard and display and network...

    This just replaces a smaller flash drive... More storage...
  • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @06:49PM (#10099461)
    It would be simple to use whatever system you come across as a linux system. Simply plug in the drive, boot, bootstrap, emerge system, compile a kernel, build some choice packages, wait a few days and voila, instant gentoo box.

    -Note: this is a joke.
    • -Note: this is a joke.
      Point of reference: I installed Gentoo on my Latitude CP (233MMX, 128MB) a couple weeks ago. 'emerge gdesklets-base desklet-psidisplays desklet-psisensors' took about 36 hours (for 112 packages, including Gnome).

      Still, you only have to do it once.

  • by Jah-Wren Ryel ( 80510 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @07:12PM (#10099568)
    It needs hardware encryption so that the disk is useless without the right pass-phrase, and optionally a hardware token like a separate USB pendrive (or compact flash, whatever) with a really big one-time pad on it. And I mean real encryption like AES or Blowfish, or at least triple-DES. Not something that Joe-Bob and his little beowulf cluster can crack in a week or too.
  • by LibrePensador ( 668335 ) on Saturday August 28, 2004 @07:36PM (#10099714) Journal
    Damn, it is hard to please the slashdot crowd. It's too expensive, how is this different from knoppix?

    Well, I find it very inexpensive and convenient. Yes, I could probably do this myself, but I happen to like Mandrake's distribution and this gives me the chance to support my favorite distribution in an all-in-one package that is easy to use.

    If you think you can do it reliably and more cheaply than Mandrake, please by all means give them some competition.

    But I, for one, love Mandrake. It is the fastest distribution of the latest round I tried (Suse 9.1, Fedora 2, Slackware 10) and it is very stable. I also happen to like Suse 9.1 quite a bit for certain uses, but overall lean much more strongly towards Mandrake, but I digress.

    I love this idea. You will be able to take your desktop with you everywhere without needing to use Knoppix. Knoppix is very nice, but this gives you another way to reach portability and will be faster since it runs off a HD, rather than off the CD. You can take music, documents with you and have your fully personalized desktop available anywhere where a computer is available.

    This is more convenient than a laptop in some regards as it doesn't need to be recharged and is less conspicuous and thus less likely to be stolen.

    And I don't know about you, but I can find a computer I can plug into just about anywhere, whether it's at a friend's or a relative's house, the library...

    I think Mandrake is working very hard and they are making incredible progress. I have tested their 10.1 Beta 2 and it is already very, very good, although I would caution new users to wait for the *Official* release, not community, and definitely not RCs.
    • I think you hit all the good reasons for this. The idea of going anwhere and having your own desktop and files is very nice. I think I will do it with an 80GB drive and put Suse on it. Students could use it at school and have a reliable system instead M$.
  • I had a externel scsi hd that I could plug into ANY Mac and boot MY desktop.
    This is a little old for mac users

  • I can't tell from the website whether it has a fan. If it has a fan it is probably too noisy. Can someone with any LaCie 2.5" external drive tell me whether their's is quiet?

    That's great that it gets its power from the USB port. Having to carry around an AC/DC adapter would significantly reduce the portability.
    • I used to have a LaCie 40gb Pocket Drive (5400rpm). I sold it due to lack of money for food and rent. Anywho, the 2.5" is quiet, and there is no fan. I was also able to power the drive from FireWire.

      My new Maxtor(5400rpm) offer no such luxury (although it also is fanless and pretty quiet).

      You may consider me a noise freak by the way. I have a fanless C3 733mhz with a fanless 60watt psu as my main computer.
  • I'm surprised nobody has mentioned this, but I rather think it's strange that a Linux distro would be in favor of forcibly rebooting a machine just to start your own. I mean, at my office and all the offices I've worked at previously, computers stay on 24/7 and only reboot when IT decided to dump a bunch of Wind0ze updates on us. The Unix/Linux boxen never rebooted unless there was hardware failure involved.

    Even if someone isn't present that day, there's usually something going on that shouldn't be dis
  • Imagine trying to make a portable XP drive do what this one does. You take it to a client's office, boot up, and -- whoops! -- XP detects a new hardware configuration and grinds to a halt until you beg Microsoft for permission to continue. Fat chance they'll suffer your frequent pleas for long!

    What's great is that this is a device whose time has come. It's imminent ubiquity seems inevitable, giving Linux a very big leg up on Windows.

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