LinuxPPC unleashes LinuxPPC 1999 Q3 88
haaz writes "LinuxPPC Inc. took the wraps off their newest release, LinuxPPC 1999 Q3, today. It's got RAGE 128 video card drivers, and a whole gaggle of fixes for iMacs and Blue G3s, plus new glibc, GNOME and gcc packages. Bochs is thrown in for good measure, along with an updated graphical installer. "
PMU Sleep (Score:2)
Re:RAGE 128? (Score:1)
Re:cheap version of LinuxPPC (Score:1)
I agree (Score:1)
Re:What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:1)
Re:I have linuxppc (Score:1)
What you did probably turn off is the compile option for Power Management. This option enables the sleep code and should be harmless unless you actually try to sleep. For sleeping, there is the snooze command, and there's a little daemon (pmud) written by Paul, which monitors your machine and can excute scripts when the Power cable is connecter or disconnected. pmud also handles sleep when the lid is closed.
The way i remember it... (Score:1)
LINUX stands for: Linux Inux Nux Ux X
That machine looks kick ass... (Score:1)
I'd stick with LPPC R5 (99) (Score:1)
I got mine pretty quickly. (Score:1)
I had the R4 disc within a week, and I got my copy of R5 (LinuxPPC 1999) a few days after they announced it.
You can check your order online (Score:2)
https://order.linuxppc.com/status/
Put in your email address, and the system will send you an email with the status of your order.
Best,
Re:So, they've added more stuff, but... (Score:1)
Re:x86 Emulation? (Score:1)
Re:linuxPPC problems (Score:1)
Re:You can check your order online (Score:1)
I just want the cd and I would love a response from some one at LinuxPPC. I actually emailed you "haaz" but I haven't gotten a reply. Don't reply on slashdot, reply to me via email on what should happen.
I'm sick of calling Minnesota over such a silly issue.
Re:Does ANYONE like the graphical installer? (Score:1)
Re:Year-Based Versions is Old news (Score:1)
ship Illustrator 3.0 until late '91 or '92, which is the reason I suspect they went back to standard version numbers...
Just the opposite for me (Score:1)
Re:no, you don't. (Score:1)
Re:PMU Sleep (Score:1)
Do you recommend any pages that are pretty up-to-date?
peace,
ijones
Re:Maybe XMMS will stop crashing my iMac now! (Score:1)
Re:PPCs (Score:1)
Re:You can check your order online (Score:1)
Re:What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:1)
I think Microsoft likes it because it makes your software feel old more readily. Still using Windows 95? Who can remember 4.00b.3128.032-SR2b anyhow?
Meaning of Q3? (Score:2)
I think it's the second one.
What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:2)
Re:Meaning of Q3? (Score:1)
Rage 128 (Score:2)
Yay lily! (Score:1)
Re:What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:3)
Actually, the year-based numbering scheme makes a certain amount of sense, for several reasons. With this scheme, there is absolutely no doubt about hoe old a product is, and it is easy to identify features and additions. Which is easier, really-- Linux 2.1.134pl6 or Linux95? :) Seriously, though--in many ways it helps to more accurately identify product versions that other systems.
On the other hand, I supported Windows 95 and Office 97 for a long time, and it gets very frustrating when the average user says: "I have Windows 97 on their machine. How do I print a label?". "Do you mean Windows 98, or Office 97?" Of course they have no idea. Maybe the only good way is to giove every product a completely different name, with no numbers attached at all. "I'm using Super Death Office From Hell for Windows In The Red Box. How do I print a label?"
darren
That seals it... (Score:1)
I've always liked the PowerPC architecture(s), but this actually makes it worth my trouble. Whoo-hoo!
G4 (Score:1)
is Debian/PPC worth it? (Score:2)
i was wondering if anyone could tell me what the status of the port of the Debian distribution to the PPC platform is? is it usable yet? The page at
http://www.debian.org/ports/powerpc/
says almost nothing.. and the documentation listed there in the docu/ directory returns 404 not founds. there's some powerpc binaries at
ftp://ftp.us.debian.org//debian/dists/potato/ma
but i have no idea how to install them, and no clue where the documentation is.
Has anyone actually used this, or can anyone tell me how it's going? Are there installation instructions somewhere i missed? Is the Potato thing there really a full, complete distribution?
I've never used debian, and I'm not totally certain how the debian distribution would be different (especially since i never get to use RPM anyway, so the package manager doesn't matter much to me..) but i'm curious. Is it worth checking out, or should i just go with the Linuxppc 5/1999?
Does ANYONE like the graphical installer? (Score:2)
My biggest problem is that they present a sequential task as a non-sequential task (by allowing you to click on any step of the install process in any order you like). You cannot install linux into a partition you haven't created yet.
It's also confusing to start-up into x-windows with lot's of visual clutter (mouse eyes, task bar, logo windows) as opposed to going into a modal install program where you can do *one* thing: install the software.
I have linuxppc (Score:1)
Kirk
Maybe XMMS will stop crashing my iMac now! (Score:1)
Re:I have linuxppc (Score:1)
I'll heavily recommend the 1999 PowerBook G3 series. They're just so neat.
--
Mac Flashed Voodoo3 under LinuxPPC (Score:1)
More USB mice? (Score:1)
I'm a linux newbie, so maybe it was possible before, but I couldn't figure it out. If anyone would care to point me to a source that could help me...
cheap version of LinuxPPC (Score:1)
LinuxPPC on CD? I wrote to a few guys, asking if
they were planning to release one, and got
the following answers:
LinuxMall - No, we do not have a single-CD
version of it and I do not know of
any plans to have one in the near future.
LinuxCentral - Probably not
CheapBytes - If you are referring to a low cost
version, we have been planning on doing
that for awhile. We have a power mac
sitting here just for the task. No
definite date of availability at this
time.
Any ideas? anyone wants to start a business?
Re:What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:1)
Re:cheap version of LinuxPPC (Score:1)
Date in Version Name Good for Quarterly Releases (Score:1)
A lot of people may have missed the news that LinuxPPC is now offering a quarterly subscription model. For $99, you get CDs for a year, with promised releases every quarter. Under this scheme, having the quarter of release be the version name makes an awful lot of sense, as the most unambiguous way of identifying what version a user has.
This is rather nice even if one doesn't intend to update every three months, as R5 was pushed back from its release date for about half a year (two current releases-worth of time).
Re:sooner or later (Score:1)
I spoke to Jason Haas at LinuxPPC and basically he said it would take some time, but that it would work eventually.
Re:no, you don't. (Score:1)
cmd-option-o-f
linuxPPC problems (Score:1)
Lots of knowledge in there... if you got a question, search through the newsgroup with deja.com [deja.com]'s engine or get right on that comp.os.linux.powerpc [comp.linux.powerpc] link
-nicole
Re:linuxPPC problems (Score:1)
comp.os.linux.powerpc [os.linux.powerpc]
-nicole
Re:is Debian/PPC worth it? (Score:2)
Partition your disks how you'd like, using something like MacOS's disk tool. You might have to boot from the CD to do this. You could use a pmac-enabled fdisk, but since you're not in Linux yet, you can't.
Download the Debian base stuff like normal. Get base_21.tgz (or whatever they call the one large archive) and put it somewhere the install program can find it (like an NFS share, CD-ROM, or even an HFS partition). Get the Debian boot images and the ramdisk image.
Grab the LinuxPPC install program. Expand it somewhere and run the BootX program, but don't
let it boot the kernel from the LinuxPPC setup. Choose the Debian kernel instead, with the proper ramdisk settings (the default should be good). To get BootX to find the Debian kernels might be kinda tricky... try by putting it in System Folder:Linux Kernels. A little goofing around got me booting the Debian kernels.
When you boot, it should start the dbootstrap program, and you'll have to find where you put that Debian base system. You should be able to mount an HFS partition (NOT HFS+, but regular HFS).
The rest of the installation should be normal. I might have forgotten a big impotant step here, as I'm recalling this from memory of an installation two weeks ago. I would recommend highly that you follow the unstable ("potato") branch of things. I can't imagine how unusable the stable ("slink") branch would be.
--
Re:Rage 128 (Score:1)
I don't suppose some keen driver hacker who is not me could look and see what changes can be made? For both Gnome and KDE look equally stupid in 640x480x4.
Another tip... (Score:2)
Another important tip: www.linuxppc.org has _excellent_ installation documentation. Give it a good read even if doing a Debian install. It filled me in on lots of the little details I was completely ignorant to before I started.
Even though I'm a big Debian fan, I would recommend giving LinuxPPC an install if you're new to the PPC scene. The LinuxPPC guys have done an excellent job of getting together a great installation program and distribution in such (comparitively) little time (well, compared to Intel Linux). I also find the LinuxPPC lists to be full of really skilled and friendly people always adding cool new features to the Linux kernels and the programs they maintain. Don't forget to search the LinuxPPC mailing list archives, lots of questions you have can be answered there.
--
Re:Maybe XMMS will stop crashing my iMac now! (Score:1)
--
Re:What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:1)
The year-based approach to version numbers seems especially inappropriate for an OS like Linux, where the speed of development is faster than for an OS like Windows. It's not entirely bad for Windows to be released with a year-based name, since it's more user-friendly for the home market and Microsoft doesn't release more than one version per year anyway.
Since the Linux market tends right now to be based on very knowledgable computer users (who at least don't mind names like Linux 2.1.134pl6), and since new versions of Linux distributions can sometimes be released more than 2 or 3 times a year, the name-based approach loses its appeal here. The old scheme is more informative to more people.
But who really cares what it's called anyway? The important thing is to commend the folks at LinuxPPC for what seems like some great work. It's come a long, long way from just two versions back, whatever the heck you want to call it.
Re:That seals it... (Score:1)
I wonder if I can get a MacOS rebate (like the wintel rebate scheme)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the alleged goal with the wintel rebate was that Microsoft was charging hardware vendors to ship their machines with Windows. Apple doesn't charge Apple to ship its own machines with Mac OS, at least not in nearly in the same way.
Although some people will never be able to grasp the concept, part of the Mac value proposition is that the lines between the hardware and the softwware are blurred a bit more. The industry will always attempt to box Apple into a "hardware company" or a "software company", when it's actually both: a computer company.
- Scott
------
Scott Stevenson
maybe, maybe not (Score:1)
Maybe, but I think it's unlikley. If it doesn't work under Mac OS, it probably wont work under linux.
I got a cheap USB three button from Belkin in March. It worked on the Mac OS, and did the same under LinuxPPC R4. Cool thing was, I didn't have to do any fiddling with config files; all three buttons functioned just like they would on a PC right off the bat.
HOWEVER, Linux doesn't support USB plug and play, AFAIK. I found this out the hard way when I unplugged one of the mice from my iMac and spent the next half hour fscking my partitions.
Linus is threatening to improve USB support in 2.4, maybe P&P will work then.
Re:What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:1)
Imagine a whole shelf full of RedHat 1999 Jan-Dec. $960 a year just to keep current. If you only release quarterly, that's still $280 for a year's worth of installs. NT Workstation ends up costing $1000 or so quarterly. That's the subscription model that Microserfs fantisize about while masturbating.
Year-Based Versions is Old news (Score:1)
They were doing the year based version scheme a decade ago, then switched over to standard numbers. Hmm... Now if everyone wasn't so panicky about Y2k, we'd probably still be running with the original decimal version increases.
Course, Microsoft always has to find some nifty gimic to capture attention. I still feel those year-based versions are for internal use, like an absolute deadline for software release... otherwise their stuff would be permanently delayed.
Re:Does ANYONE like the graphical installer? (Score:2)
-toby
Debian/PPC Installation Help (Score:1)
That's all I can find at the moment. But I can swear I remember seeing some unfinished installation docs while poking around a mirror of their ftp site. But I can't find it now. Enjoy,
Ben
Re:What ever happened to version numbers? (Score:1)
birds don't like me
jcarr
Re:FUCK ME IN THE GOAT ASS. (Score:1)
Why don't you pull your head out of your ass and tell ROSIE to let go!
;P
sooner or later (Score:1)
OTOH, the PPC guys don't have to worry about hot swaping drives or infra-red support.
Re:Rage 128 (Score:2)
Read here [openprojects.net] for good news and here [openprojects.net] for bad news (well, at least for you).
Some people like the installer (Score:2)
The non-sequential nature of how the installer wasn't ever straightened out. But hey, guess what I did today
jcarr
Re:linuxPPC problems (Score:1)
-nicole
Re: (Score:1)
LinuxPPC/SMP on Sky Computers? (Score:1)
Any word on when/if Linux/Beowolf will will run on one of these [sky.com]?
Glad they are busy but where is my copy? (Score:1)
I've called once and written 4 emails. Guy on the phone was clueless whether it had shipped or not. I haven't gotten a single response from any of my emails. (Sent the email to three different email addresses.)
Arrrrgh!
LinuxPPC maybe cool but if they can't get organized then they are going to flop.
no, you don't. (Score:2)
It is completely possible to not even have macos on the drive-- just boot into the Open Firmware prompt (cmd-ctrl-o-f i think) and type in a couple quick commands, and it will start up in linuxppc every time after that until you boot into macos (which will reset your OF stuff.. although you can set it back from there with this convenient program called Boot Variables.)
This is all very clearly documented in the linuxppc.org installation instructions, which i guess you've never had reason to read.