Linux 2.6 Turns 1 Year Old 24
Paul Kucher writes "On December 17th, 2003, Linux 2.6 was released by Linus Torvalds, saying 'The beaver is out of detox.' This was a reference to the last pre-release of the 2.6 kernel, which was called Beaver in Detox. Although a stable release, the 2.6 kernel has added many new features in the past year due to the new development model. It will be interesting to see what else is in store for this kernel, and I imagine it will be years before it is in maintenance mode."
Well I'll be the first to say it.... (Score:2)
Also... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Still on 2.4 here (Score:1, Flamebait)
oh, piss off.... you must have the weirdest usb going for it not to work with any of the current live CDs that have 2.6 kernels... it's one of the things they really make sure works.
Re:Still on 2.4 here (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Still on 2.4 here (Score:2)
Re:Still on 2.4 here (Score:4, Informative)
Re:uptime... (Score:2)
Re:uptime... (Score:2)
So you've had a laptop up for one year? Or is uname -a just screwed up?
bullshit! (Score:2, Informative)
That's bullshit since the output shows that your kernel was compiled in July 2004, not in December last year.
Burning, burning, burning... (Score:1)
Re:Burning, burning, burning... (Score:1)
Re:Burning, burning, burning... (Score:1)
Re:Burning, burning, burning... (Score:2)
I haven't been able to get it to work on 2.6...
Great, wonderful, blah, blah, blah... (Score:1)
Great, wonderful, blah, blah, blah...
Now let's get a kernel fix for recent 2.6.9 series kernels that allows you to boot off of SATA drives hanging off of a NFORCE2 or NFORCE3 chipset's SATA ports. Nothing more annoying than having to take out your 10K RPM Raptor for a 7.2K RPM IDE plow horse...
in china... (Score:2)
ATARAID (Score:2)
Happy birthday, 2.6 (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong. I love linux and I'm very gratefull for the work that group of people invests into the project. Still, 2.6 wasn't by far near the stable status it got and that misslabelling can be very counterproductive. After all, the common idea is that linux is difficult, not ready for serious work and incredibly buggy and a buggy release just hel