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Operating Systems Businesses Software Linux Apple

Quick Reviews Of The Latest From Crux, Knoppix 19

A semi-anonymous reader writes "lakerdonald has written a review of Knoppix 3.6, the latest release version of the popular Linux Live CD. Knoppix currently ranks #3 in the distrowatch chart, and is certainly a distro to keep your eyes on!" (Apparently, German readers can also get Knoppix 3.7 on the cover of a Germany computer magazine.) Another anonymous reader writes "The Crux Linux ppc port is growing really fast and well! These guys reviewed the release candidate #3 for the 2.0 version of this light-weight distribution."
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Quick Reviews Of The Latest From Crux, Knoppix

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  • Speed (Score:5, Informative)

    by Stevyn ( 691306 ) on Wednesday September 15, 2004 @01:56AM (#10253642)
    I've used knoppix a lot and I think it's a great distro for a specific need, it's not fast. But I blame that on the fact it runs everything of the CD and into memory. This review is talking about lighting speed. I love knoppix, but it's never the
    "fast" distro. It's just the one that "works" TM.
  • fast is relative (Score:4, Informative)

    by clsc ( 730336 ) on Wednesday September 15, 2004 @02:06AM (#10253672) Homepage Journal
    >> it's not fast. But I blame that on the fact it
    >> runs everything of the CD and into memory

    Then again, if you have a lot of memory, it's quite fast - otherwise the HDinstall feature is quite simple (although not mentioned in the review). If you HDinstall you'll have something like a debian distro, which will be as fast as you and your equipment allows it to be.
  • by damiangerous ( 218679 ) <1ndt7174ekq80001@sneakemail.com> on Wednesday September 15, 2004 @02:19AM (#10253722)
    Namely Captive NTFS and the ndiswrapper.

    This is a timely article, I just burned and used it today. A couple days ago my wife showed some interest in switching to Linux (after many XP frustrations) so I popped in a KNOPPIX 3.3 CD I had sitting around so she could try it out. She has an SMC2635 wireless card for her laptop and, sadly, it just isnt supported under Linux. Enter 3.6. It's still not supported, but two additions make it as painless as possible to get working: Captive NTFS and ndiswrapper. I downloaded the SMC drivers under XP and unpacked them on the hard drive. Booting back into KNOPPIX Captive NTFS then allowed me to mount the XP hard drive using XP's own NTFS dlls for read/write, and then use ndiswrapper to allow KNOPPIX to use the XP drivers for the SMC. Wireless goodness. The result? She's sitting behind me backing up files so I can repartition the HD to add a Linux partition.

  • Knoppix vs Mepis (Score:5, Interesting)

    by rduke15 ( 721841 ) <rduke15@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Wednesday September 15, 2004 @03:10AM (#10253972)
    Has someone tried recent versions of both Knoppix and Mepis?

    Reviews are interesting, but comparative remarks from actual users would be even more interesting.

    If you used both, how do they compare? Did you switch from one to the other, and why? Or do you use both for different purposes?
  • by kalidasa ( 577403 ) * on Wednesday September 15, 2004 @07:03AM (#10254680) Journal

    I've used Knoppix quite a bit, and have only twice had problems with hardware incompatibilities (both on old machines). On the other hand, every "live CD" distro I've tried for ppc (on a pretty new machine, a G3 white iBook) has had some problem, usually with video. This is rather strange, as x86 hardware is far more heterogenous than Apple hardware is.

    Sure, you can configure Gentoo to work on an iBook, but the whole purpose of a live cd is to have something quick and autoconfigurable. The last time I remember this subject coming up, about a year ago, this posting [slashdot.org] was modded informative for responding to the call for a realistic LiveCD distribution for PPC with "Debian isn't really as hard as the poster says . . . I got my iBook online with debian, everything working, in the space of one weekend." A weekend does not a Live CD make. Have the Live CDs for PPC improved to the point that they'll boot from autoconfigure on recent (1-4 year old) Apple hardware?

  • I got an iBook at the begining of this year (being my first no linux machine in quite a while) and wanted to install dome flavor of linux alongside os x as soon as possible. I had no luck getting any distro to work right as all seemed aimed at the g3. Crux however is compileing the kernel at this very moment. Unlike the other distro's the install is going as expected could actually be done with little linux experiance from the instructions given (as is the intent of crux)
  • It's nice. A lot of things had changed from v3.1, the last version I used. I was amazed. Everything worked out of the CD, including my audio, network, etc. I don't know why I was stuck at 1024x768 and couldn't go higher. Nor why it had to use 85 hz. I wanted 75 hz.

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