Red Hat Releases Version 6.1 394
RaymondInFinland writes "Red Hat 6.1 appeared on ftp.redhat.com Only a i386 version but the
release also comes as an ISO image. " Its not supposed to be official for a bit yet, and my guess is that it'll be pretty rocky
downloading for a bit, but it is there.
force? (Score:1)
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Re:Mirrors? : sunsite.unc.edu (Score:1)
Sunsite is going around 50k/s.
ftp:// sunsite.unc.edu/pub/linux/distributions/redhat/red hat-6.1/6.1-i386.iso [unc.edu]
ISO Image Mirror Available (Score:1)
Re:broken redhat (Score:2)
Aaah, Grasshopper: look at the patches inside the SRPM -- both BIND and Sendmail had the security fixes applied before 5.2 shipped. :-)
Remember, when RH 5.2 shipped, BIND 8 was not in very wide use, and Sendmail 8.9 was quite new. Rather than release a new, largely untested version of something with possibly huge new security holes (which thankfully didn't actually happen, but it's a lie to claim that there was no or low risk at that point), they released the old, known-to-work version with a patch for the known security holes.
A lot of stuff RH does may not be great, but don't slam them on this one -- they got it right, for certain. (Now, releasing pre-kernels may be another story, but there's a good argument to be made that said pre-kernel was much more stable than the official release at that point...)
It is a bug-fix (Score:2)
Re:broken redhat - rpmfind (Score:1)
Re:broken redhat - rpmfind (Score:1)
wrt RPMs, try rpmfind. www.rpmfind.net
$ rpmfind will, when configured correctly, find any apps matching that, plus work out the dependencies needed that aren't met on your system, and offer to d/l it all for you. It's not perfect, but IMHO a reasonable solution.
I'd like to a new packaging system developed, combining the strengths of rpm and apt together with standard tarballs for distribution and local/remote management. Such a thing would be really cool and kick everything else into touch.
That's the fun of it :-) (Score:2)
Re:My Take on 6.1 from Beta Testing->Release (Score:1)
Re:another too quick to market jump.. (Score:1)
--
Jeremy Katz
Re:Release dates follow stock price exactly...NOT (Score:1)
Re:They need another way of getting money (Score:1)
http://www.tummy.com/krud/
"Kevin Fenzi, co-author of the Linux Security HOWTO, and a senior member of tummy.com has created a distribution based on Red Hat which includes the most up to date security and application errata. This distribution, called KRUD, also included a variety of other freely distributable software."
Re:Where to buy quick cheap version of CD? (Score:1)
Re:broken redhat (Score:1)
It will upgrade any packages that are already installed. Nice for getting up to speed from updates.rehat.com.
-Pete
Re:Changelog? (Score:1)
Well, since it isn't "officially" released yet, you probably won't find an whats-new list from Red Hat util it is. Suppposedly that will happen on Monday. However, if you search you can find a whats-new list for the Beta release (code named Lorax) and extrapolate from there.
Re:FAST ISO Mirror (Score:1)
Does 6.1 have CUPS? (Score:1)
Re:broken redhat (Score:1)
Re:broken redhat (Score:1)
I still don't think it's quite as cool at apt. But it does solve the major portion of the problem.
Re:Screenshots? - Here (Score:4)
The trick is that any mirror of the actual distro. (an not just the iso file) will have this directory of images of the installer. They are from the installation manual.
Nonsense. (Score:1)
Screenshots? (Score:3)
Perhaps asking for screenshots is a little lame, but I'd really like to see what the graphical installer looks like. Anyone got 'em?
Re:My Take on 6.1 from Beta Testing->Release (Score:1)
If you really screwedup your whatever config, then you should probably fix it, not ignore it. Giving this kind of options is, imho, probably a bad idea. Booting in single user mode would let you fix it without taking ages to start, and without letting your system half-running at the end.
seb.
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Re:beowulf (Score:1)
Yeah, and you can buy a CD with such a system on any street bazaar in Russia.
Export laws on software are a joke.
Mirrors? (Score:1)
Re:another too quick to market jump.. (Score:1)
Re:another too quick to market jump.. (Score:1)
Re:Upgrading? (Score:1)
$rpmfind --latest RedHat
And that should update . . .hmm, maybe it is 'redhat', Oh, well, you can figure it out ;)
another too quick to market jump.. (Score:1)
APM in default kernel? (Score:1)
Re:It's NOT fragmentation. (Score:1)
Re:Ok.. so for the new features .... are they GPL' (Score:1)
While I think that "narrowing it down" is generally a bad thing when it comes to Linux, I think that if they can afford Mandrake, they should snap them up. From what I can tell, they are basically the same, except for the fact that Mandrake is more polished. Redhat could benefit from the better setup, etc, and Mandrake could benefit from the spending power and brand name.
Redhat and Mandrake seem to be going for the exact same market, unlike a lot of the other distros, so I don't think there would be any sacrifices in diversity.
It's NOT fragmentation. (Score:1)
From a user point of view 6.1 is identical to 6.1 other than the nicer installer (it's about on par with Win98's, which means there's still room to go) and the automated update facility (finally - I almost switched to SuSE to get that
And finally, if you're running a corporate IT cluster and it's working fine with no crashes and 5 months uptime DON'T UPGRADE IT EVER. Pay no attention to the shiny new boxes. I'm serious. Most IT people I know don't want to screw with anything once they have it working right, and with Linux that's quite possible. The only time you should upgrade such a system is 1) retiring the hardware for new boxen 2) a software upgrade requires it (ie, if Oracle 9 comes out and requires kernel 2.4).
Now on SlashMirror (Score:1)
SlashMirror: Where to put files for fellow /.'ers
Re:Did you READ his Reply Comment? (Score:1)
Ternary DNS? (Score:1)
I find this really amusing, because while Ternary is close, I think what they really were shooting for was Tertiary.
Re:FREEBSD's /usr/ports (Score:1)
But then again, here are the problems with the various distributions of Linux I've run into as well:
RedHat 6.0 - The included Gnome config just simply does not work correctly. I shouldn't have to right-click, minimize, then left click to get a window back in the foreground.
Debian 2.1 - dselect is absolutly horrible, I'd rather not have a package selection interface than use it. It's included DHCP client doesn't work for me other than the first try, and the Netscape packages won't install regardless of what I do.
TurboLinux 3.6 - No problems at all, other than it's based on glibc 2.0.7 instead of 2.1
Caldera 2.3 - Again, no problems.
FreeBSD 3.2 - Included package for DHCP client refuses to work even when I compile bpf support into the kernel and make the device files. Great.
Linux Pro 5.4 - Why the hell does LinuxMall even bother sending this piece of trash?
Linux Mandrake 6.0 - My particular CD won't boot. Bah.
To FreeBSD's credit, it's the only free UNIX like that even boots off my HD now. Lilo just sits there and looks dumb. Joy.
Out of this stack of Linux distributions (RH, Caldera, Mandrake, Slack, TurboLinux, LinuxPro, SuSE 6.2,) and a FreeBSD CD, I've found 3 reasonably usable distributions to me that work within a few hours after install - Slack 4.0, Caldera, and TurboLinux.
Yay.
Of course, all the zealots out there will flame me for stating my experiences and opinions. I don't care.
By the way, all the distributions I tried were installed from CDs I bought from LinuxMall.
the program rpmfind (Score:1)
Under NT? (Score:1)
There's a SCSI/IDE emulation module for NT? I'm aware of one for Linux but not for Windows NT. Remember, the original poster was talking about using the NT port of cdrecord.
--Joe--
Re:does anyone EVER DO ANY RESEARCH?????? (Score:1)
Something I've been thinking about (Score:4)
I've seen a lot of talk about "make a server-only distribution." That's something I've been thinking about a lot lately.
Today, pretty much every Linux distribution uses the same "super duty" philosophy: put every package known to man on the user's computer, start the same set of services, and there you go. Instant server. Instant workstation. Instant anything, Instant everything.
This is troubling to me. I know that for my server installation, I don't WANT X, I don't want Netscape, I don't want GNOME or KDE or any of that other client-oriented, workstation stuff installed. It just wastes space sitting on my hard drive. However, Redhat's server install is the biggest of the 3 options, throwing EVERYTHING on the drive, leaving me with perhaps 300 megabytes of crap I just don't need. I even deselected X, and I still got some of the X11 packages installed!
So why don't distribution makers make server oriented distributions and workstation oriented ones, keeping the 2 separate? Simple. Linux users are stubborn people, perhaps the most stubborn of any in the industry. CUPS comes out, and there is lots of talk about how the current system works fine, we don't need a new system. Berlin is in development, but a mere mention of that brings up the X zealots, ready to kill anyting anywhere close to being modern. About the only thing Linux users will upgrade for is the kernel, and only because it's chic to run Linus' latest and greatest. The current set of Linux users is a rather small subset of all the types of users out there. Mom doesn't need Apache, wu-ftpd, or nfs. Mom just needs StarOffice, X, GNOME/KDE/wtahever, and Netscape. Why force it on her?
The fact is, separating workstations and servers makes a whole lot of sense. A lot of the security holes you see in servers come from client-oriented apps (Some of the GNOME bugs come to mind.) Similarly, for machines that only run workstation stuff, server stuff causes problems (wu-ftpd is an excellent example here). Why install stuff that won't be used?
I wish distribution makers would realize this. The world doesn't need 50 distributions that can do it all; how about one that does one thing really, really well? It seems to me that it would make a lot more sense.
Just think about it...a lean distribution, optimized to do what it does well. Now that would be something.
Re:Red Hat Versions & Updates (Score:2)
1) The public betas don't give us any of the information I was referring to in my first post. I'd like to know why they choose what software they include and why they ignore others. If/when things like next-generation subsystems might be integrated. Why they stick to old versions of certain software. Why do they choose to add certain patches, and what their rationale is in their directory structure (which I personally happen to like for the most part). That's what I mean when I say I'd like to know where the development is headed.
2) Rawhide is a good effort, but it really seems a bit haphazard at time (look at the kernel packages right now). The SRPMS often don't match the RPMS (or extra SRPMS are left around), and it's just not the same as having a group of packages that Red Hat endorses as being "reasonably tested and approved" for use by users who want/need newer software.
3) Even if Lorax and RawHide did solve the problems of open development and new packages, I would still prefer two branched distributions. I'd rather see more server-side stuff on a Server Distribution CD when I'm installing the servers (optional PAM and apache modules, maybe a choice of databases, etc), and more client/workstation packages (where to begin) included on the Workstation Distribution CD.
Am I way out in left field on my thinking?
Re:Something I've been thinking about (Score:1)
And you can always remove RPMs after install. I did this to get a Caldera 1.3 distro to fit comfortably on a 100MB HDD, including a 50MB Netware 4 server! You would be suprised to know how much stuff you really don't need to just boot and serve a few files, makes me wonder why I don't see more stripped down distros sold with network appliances. Then again, maybe I'm just not looking.
Debian had ISO images before either one of them! (Score:1)
Re:Screenshots? - Here (Score:1)
Re:Microsoft-like Behaviour (Score:1)
>real Microsoft-like behaviour on RedHat's part.
It's mainly a bugfix release, compile all the new updated RPMS from the 6.0 release and any new software that you would want to upgrade (KDE, GNOME, XFree86). You don't HAVE to buy this, from anyone, you don't even have to download it if you don't want. Personally if I have a stable system I am not going to mess it up just for the latest and greatest.
Would you rather have it where they _don't_ release, and every time you install a new system you have to spend all day applying fixes and upgrading packages. I didn't think so. Just put the new boxes out there for the marks to pay for and only upgrade if necessary, you can even steal specific RPMS from the new distro and apply them to the old if you want.
Anyway if they were really Microsoft they wouldn't release at all, just sit on the bugfixes and new features instead of replacing the current version with a newer one.
>*ALL* of Linux is a fucking media circus
Oohh, if it's popular it can't be good. Take me to some dark, dank corner where no one is and I'll be happy. That way I can be "Elite" with all my friends. Blech.
Changelog? (Score:2)
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Re:beowulf (Score:1)
man rpm (Score:1)
should make you not hate rpms so much
don't get me wrong i don't like rpms either, but they're not so bad as you make them out to be. and yes i agree debian package system absolutely kicks
Re:another too quick to market jump.. (Score:1)
I'm curious as to why M$ didn't just call:
Windows 95 OSR --> Windows 96, and
Windows 98 SE --> Windows 99
considering the timeframe when both of those came out.
Oh wait, I was asking M$ to do something LOGICAL. Silly me.
Re:Upgrading? (Score:1)
I've done this a few times now. I have many RPMs I've created myself so I like to double check that everything is working before moving on to the next package. The last thing I want is to have all daemons on my system to not be working right because RPM moved their config files to
Re:how to burn an ISO image on a CD from NT? (Score:1)
cute. (Score:2)
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Oh good god. Freaking conspiracy theorists. (Score:3)
Re:almost got the first cd (Score:2)
Hee hee.. (Score:2)
Languages that feature overloading.. Usually something that is widely embraced in the programming world. How ironic. ;)
Re:Nonsense. (Score:2)
Re:Ternary DNS? (Score:2)
as in Primary, Secondary, Ternary (look it up at dictionary.com)
If your refering to the Tertiary age, which was part of the Cenozoic era, I don't quite get the joke.
Note to idiots... (Score:2)
There
In closing, I'd like to say, "Sheesh."
Re:Exactly 1 day after I start installing 6.0 (Score:2)
And probably 90 days for a production system.
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It's October 6th. Where's W2K? Over the horizon again, eh?
Re:Microsoft-like Behaviour (Score:2)
Yes, they've made mistakes in the past, so what?
You're free to create or use another distribution, fact is that RH's model is working for RedHat, why snivel about it?
Any company large enough to support AIX environments will have at least one person with enough of a clue to (a) wait for stable releases, and (b) FTP. RedHat's done a great deal over the last year to legitimize what we used to have to _sneak_ onto machines. The value in that alone is worth the rest of it to me in my daily job.
Having just gotten capital approval to replace some AIX boxen with both Linux and *BSD machines, and having played the patch/update game for quite a while in both environments (Linux since a
If you've paid for AIX and AIX support, you'd know there's no comparison in cost.
I actually tend to buy more CDs personally than we do at work because the release cycle isn't long enough to match my work maintenance cycle. But then I buy more FreeBSD CDs too. FTP installs work just fine from work too, multiple DS-3's make it satisfactory to do.
RedHat also makes updates available for the last couple of releases. Nobody's "forced" to upgrade for bugfixes if they're running a relatively new version-- even if they don't understand that they can apply the patches themselves and compile their own packages.
If you want to complain about people being uninformed, educate them, if you're just whining because RH is being successful, you're more than welcome to try to build your own brand.
RedHat isn't Linux. Linux isn't RedHat. Time you opened *your* eyes to that fact.
Paul
Jeez. (Score:3)
I know that it's where were were told it was, but it's possible Red Hat are waiting for a reason.
News sources vying for market share may have a reason for being first with every story, but you'd think slashdot'd be above that sort of thing.
Any attempts to log onto ftp.redhat.com before typing this are purely hypocracy on my part, but should not invalidate my point.
ISO from Red Hat? (Score:2)
It appears that the student is teaching the master.
Re:another too quick to market jump.. (Score:4)
Not really. I mean this *is* a .1 release. nothing major. Basically this is just a "service pack" release, or as our arch enemy at Redmond calls it, the "Second Edition".
i would have hoped redhat 6.1 would have waited until Xfree86 4 or something a lil more worth the version # change would have come out..Yes, but Linux 2.4 and Xfree86 4 are pretty radical changes. Don't you think that should get a version 7 number? That won't be for a few months yet anyways. Certainly way to long to wait to upgrade something that was released even longer ago.
-Brent--
Re:broken redhat (Score:3)
Re:Microsoft-like Behaviour (Score:2)
Pfah. RedHat. It's sad to see what Linux has become.
Redhat is NOT Linux!
There are many GNU/Linux distributions Redhat is only one of the many, don't like thier attitude then use one of the others. Anyone can make a GNU/Linux distribution and not all are going to be wonderful. so what? there are plenty of others that are great distributions.
If you want to abandon GNU/Linux thats your choice, but don't abandon it just because of one distribution/distributer is not to your liking.
Ethan
Re:Screenshots of GUI Install (Score:2)
Re:how to burn an ISO image on a CD from NT? (Score:2)
i already burned iso of debian from a mac and it worked very well!
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does anyone EVER DO ANY RESEARCH?????? (Score:4)
http://store.redhat.com/commerce/store.cgi?page
Includes the following:
1 Membership Card
Each release of the Official Red Hat Linux Box Set for one
year
8 Update CD shipments
Quarterly Newsletter
1 Red Hat Baseball Cap
1 Red Hat T-Shirt
15% Discount on all Red Hat, Inc. retail products* during
membership
Free passes to all tradeshows Red Hat, Inc. attends during
membership period
Complimentary gifts at tradeshows
"Members only" specials announced on our website
periodically throughout the year for RHMember Program
participants.
Additional "members only" specials reserved only for
RHMember More program members.
Re:broken redhat (Score:2)
Re:how to burn an ISO image on a CD from NT? (Score:3)
Moderators, please kill me, cause this is completely off topic.
First, I have no fintest idea about the software to write CD on WinDos. Never seen/used any.
Therefore I'd suggest to go for cdrecord. Nice UNIX command line tool recently ported to NT (alpha stage, but quite stable
Find it at:
ftp://ftp.fokus.gmd.de/pub/unix/cdrecord/alpha/
Then get your iso image and just type:
cdrecord dev=3,0 -v speed=2 -dao iso_image_name.iso
dev is SCSI number of your CD writer, dao means disk at once, speed means speed. Ah, if you CD writer is IDE, then I don't know. Best woud be to sell it and buy SCSI
Good luck
kovi
PS Sorry for style/typos I had too much beer
Redhat 6.1 - its worth it, but hold off please (Score:5)
As for this release just being an update, that if for the most part true. The main focus of this release was the introduction of the graphical installer. This is and excellent installer, easier than previous Redhat installs and far easier than other Linux distros and Windows installers. (My roommate did extensive testing of it in lorax) Kudos to Matt Wilson for his excellent work.
As for the announcement of this on /. before it was officially released by Redhat, I think a huge mistake was made. /. often warns that downloads may be rocky for awhile when it reports on a new distro release or a new kernel, but part of the reason that this is true is that the mirrors don't have time to get it before /. users start pounding it. I think many of us dislike the "first post" mentality that clouds useful discussion on /. and we should be fed up with /. following the same model for news when doing so is inappropriate.
--
Gregory J. Barlow
fight bloat. use blackbox [themes.org].
What are you talking about? (Score:3)
People shouldn't be getting "6.0" training, I'm not even sure they should be getting RedHat training. I would suggest teaching on two levels:
I would tend to agree that jumping to 7 over a window manager and kernel would be silly, but nobody's doing that.
with details, though (Score:2)
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FreeBSD (Score:2)
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Re:broken redhat (Score:2)
Check out http://www.rpmfind.net/ for a nice rpm repository.
They have a web index, but the easiest way to use the database is with the 'rpmfind' command. For more info on that go to http://rufus.w3.org/linux/rpm2html/rpmfind.html It has some nice options, including downloading dependencies for rpms, checking for upgrades, etc.
Emre |=)
Red Hat Versions & Updates (Score:5)
I also know Red Hat is trying to strattle the line between stability for servers and functionality for users, so maybe it's time for two development tracks? One that has a smaller, with a core set of sever-type packages and an server-centric installer. This distribution would get the current treatment of quarterly, well tested updates, and emergency security patches.
But then there should also be a second distribution that is more of a "rolling release" system that maybe gets a bi-weekly set of updates. I think this second distribution is needed to keep up with the active development in the area of user applications.
Both packages would have a lot of overlap, in fact the RPMS should generally usable on either distribution. But for example, we don't need GIMP and the latest version of XBill on servers, but it might be nice to have newer version of GNOME for the desktop distribution since there is such a big difference in the software in four months.
I realize this may not be the ideal way of doing things, but we need to keep two things in mind:
1) Linux is still under heavy development on the client end. In one month, Linux has gnoe from completely unusable on my brand new laptop to almost fully functional thanks to new releases of software. We need this kind of functinoality in the biggest distribution.
2) Microsoft has shown what kind of a mess you can get into when you try to maintain everything from the consumer-level system all the way up to the highets end server-level systems all in one bundle. You get a compromise that doesn't work well for either.
So, at least for another couple years while Linux is in such constant development, wouldn't it make sense to treat Linux distributions a bit differently?
Re:Redhat 6.1 - its worth it, but hold off please (Score:3)
-Ben
Have you USED Red Hat? (Score:2)
And of course, anyone trained on 6.0 who thinks 6.1 will be confusing (!) well - they can just keep running 6.0.
Not XFree or 2.4, but Gnome maybe (Score:2)
Re:Upgrading? (Score:2)
Re:Redhat 6.1 - its worth it, but hold off please (Score:2)
I firmly believe that this should have been a PRE-RELEASE for 7.0. I believe Beta Xfree86 4.0 should have been included, i believe the beta kernel should have been included, and beta of whatever gnome or kde it wants to use in the 7.0 release should have been included. This would create a market presence.. everyone would be able to toy around with the latest and greatest, vendors wouldn't have to revamp, but would have a roadmap of whats coming..
beta's aren't simply to test, but are also for market acceptance, revamp of installation methods and procedures, sales training, literature planning, advertising and marketing.
ALso, putting out a huge maybe even kludgy beta release would offer the *FIRST* production os to work out the compatibility bugs.. bugs could be killed alot quicker if the applications were interopable and interlaced from the get go.. that way the whole system as a whole gets upgraded, bugs get squashed and the system develops as a piece to function together..
This *IS* market fragmentation.. and NOT what we need. IS groups run stable systems, IS groups will upgrade workstations for the latest and greatest, but never a rollout on such a short product cycle would happen in any instituin of a good size..
I run a companies oracle financials package on oracle and hpux, i am responsible for 200+ workstations that monitor assembly, marketing, inventory and process control. no way in HELL i could implement redhat on these systems with such a short market life. 2 years is what any company expects as MINIMUL life in market, 3 years is the ultimate goal. 6 months is a sham..
again, these are my beliefs.. no reason to flame, but just what i feel. so don't reply with "then don't say anything or don't buy it" because this does'nt explicitly relate to redhat, but the linux market in general.
Re:Redhat 6.1 (Score:2)
odd/even (Score:2)
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Do these announcements bother anyone else? (Score:2)
Things like this could very well foster the idea in the media and the "mainstream users" that Linux users are greedy, immature, impatient, I-want-it-all-screw-you-hippie-gimme-what's-mine-
If RedHat felt that the time was right to tell the world, they'd tell the the world. But announcing the release before the mirrors are ready, and before RedHat is ready (if they were ready, they'd make the announcement themselves) is bordering on irresponsible, IMHO. The whole thing isn't even posted yet, just the i386 binaries!
Re:Not XFree or 2.4, but Gnome maybe (Score:2)
RedHat probably did something wrong wrt mirrors (Score:5)
But: They left their FTP servers open for public downloads of the RH6.1, which does not make sense for me (they have a separate host rh-mirror.redhat.com for mirrors downloading).
Does anybody have an explanation for this?
-Yenya
Re:They need another way of getting money (Score:3)
LSL [lsl.com] updates their GPL RedHat CD [lsl.com] constantly. From their web site:
-Brent--
Re:Redhat 6.1 (Score:2)
5.9 prior to RedHat 6.0 was Starbuck and the beta for 6.0. 6.0 is Hedwig. Lorax is 6.0.50 and 6.0.55 and is the beta for 6.1. 6.1 is an actual stable release (no, I'm not saying what it is
--
Jeremy Katz
Re:Redhat 6.1 (Score:2)
My Take on 6.1 from Beta Testing->Release (Score:5)
To say that at first there weren't any bugs would be a lie of course, but I've seen _great_ leaps ahead over the course of it. At the beginning, it took some work to get it to work.
But, through lots of beta testing, and lots of late night hacking by Matt Wilson, it's now to the point that it's the easiest installer I've seen. Much easier than Caldera's graphical, in large part, because it gives you a lot more freedom in the install. The GUI install works for CDROM installs, NFS installs, and (untested, but should work I believe) hard drive installs. If the GUI installer doesn't work for you (or you don't want it even), never fear. There's still a text-based installer for low-ram machines, and ftp or http installs.
Other nice neat things in 6.1 (for those wondering)
- kudzu: kudzu does hardware detection and will start the appropriate configuration tool. Very neat
- an interactive startup option (disable-able) ala choose what you want to start during startup for Windows 9x and DOS; so for when you screw up your sendmail config, you can still start without taking ages
- up2date: service to give access to a priority server upon registration and then will give you the new rpms in updates and give you the opportunity to install them, just download them, few other options
- fsck has a progress bar
- rp3: an easy-to-use ppp configuration tool. I haven't actually completely tested this one being on ethernet and all, but it appeared to work
- XFree 3.3.5, 2.2.12, GNOME 1.0.40 stuff (newest when it mastered...), KDE 1.1.2, glibc 2.1.2
Think that's most of the good interesting stuff. As I said, it's shaping up to be _really_ solid from what I can tell.
--
Jeremy Katz
Re:broken redhat (Score:3)
RPM uses -i for install, -U for upgrade, and -F for freshen. Have a bunch of RPMS, and you just want to install the updates for what you already have? Freshen them (rpm -Fvh *). Unfortunately, I have seen this break down, especially with kernel rpms. As for the central depository, anything that comes out of redhat proper doesnt depend on anything not in the distribution. 3rd party RPMS are different, but I have never had a problem finding requirements at freshmeat.
re: flakiness.
6.x (i am currently using rawhide), gnome issues aside is quite stable for me, and is current as far as i know. And actually, even gnome is decently stable now.
I like redhat myself, but I havent tried debian yet. One of these days, when I have an extra machine to play with, i might.
Re:Redhat 6.1 - its worth it, but hold off please (Score:2)
How is that fragmentation?
I've been upgrading my (not RedHat) system at home ever since I first got it up and going with packages from rpmfind, or tarballs, or whatever. There are web sites out there with uptimes of months and even years who don't feel the need to upgrade with every distribution's minor release.
The whole GNU/Linux system doesn't magically update everything in one big chunk just once or twice a year. You might be thinking of the *BSDs, which are much more monolithic in only that regard.
If you're arguing that beta testing releases leads to market fragmentation, then I could understand how Windows might have a monopoly (since Microsoft's beta testing seems to be less powerful than that of many free software projects).
On the other hand, your statement that beta tests are for marketing purposes leads me to believe that your definition of beta is much different from mine.
GNU/Linux is a system in a state of refinement, not rapid evolution. Yes, that's a generalization, and yes, RedHat has a history of pushing the envelope. For the most part, though, what you see on a distributed CD is not the sort of thing that Microsoft or Bethesda or Take 2 will charge you money for -- a first look at spaghetti debugging code. Since the difference between minor versions is small, a decent upgrade utility will take care of the big needs.
Perhaps you've noticed that RedHat still provides upgrades and bug fixes for versions 5.x and older?
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QDMerge [rmci.net] 0.21!
Re:Red Hat Versions & Updates (Score:3)
Secondly, your wish for a parallel distro with the newest of everything has been around for quite awhile. It is called rawhide, and it is the current status of Redhat's development. If all you want are updates, Redhat has those too, and they come out pretty frequently. Though the boxed sets may not offer the stuff that came out last week, the updates do. In 6.1, getting updates is even easier. Seems they have a nifty gui update tool, and if you buy a boxed set and register, you get access to a separate (and probably faster) ftp site for updates.
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Gregory J. Barlow
fight bloat. use blackbox [themes.org].
As you heard, the early release was a mistake (Score:2)
answer on the mirror list.
This was a goof on redhat's part... they were
going to keep it restricted until Monday.
Anyway this is a much better state of affairs
than the 6.0 release, which leaked from a few
mirrors before it was available on redhat and
before other mirrors had a chance to get it.
Our mirror completed around midnight. I'm not
eager to hose our bandwidth quite yet, so I'm
keeping it private til Monday.
Re:Jeez. (Score:2)
They weren't very happy when we mentioned that we also use some Mandrake. They went off on a very stern sermon about how Mandrake were freeloading on RH's hard work on the RedHat brand. Then they told us how we were best to stick with them, since they retained "a 70% market share", whatever that means. Not a very Open Source way to market to a corporate customer that's only interested in Linux because it's Open Source. They looked like a couple of Oracle salesmen, who'd been given a few weeks of Linux training in RTP. I think we're going to take a good, hard look at Debian soon.
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JF
Release dates follow stock price exactly (Score:2)
Re:Speaking of Debian... (Score:2)
Cheers,
J. Rodd
Yeah, well.. (as I drag this further offtopic) (Score:2)
I'm sticking with Mandrake, you fscking lusers! Er..
Joke!
One good thing does arise from all of the bitching, whining, first posting, and other offtopic idiocies.. These morons make it quite clear who is and is not worth listening to, as they all lump themselves quite neatly into.. that's right.. the latter.
I want some filters that make it to where I can't read posts from certain users. Blocking out articles isn't very exciting. Filtering out those with very, very low signal/noise ratios would be a Good Thing, especially since more and more people who you'd think would stick to AC trolling are actually getting accounts. At least those without accounts are easily filtered (and yeah, hard thresholds of 1 are highly recommended.. every once in a while I look to see what the ACs have to say about my comments.. talk about unfounded, uncreative, unintelligent deragotory flames that could only be unleashed from the mind of an impotent psychopath with so low self-esteem as to validate the notion of pressing various baseless insults, biggotry, and other "high-minded" prejudices upon a person solely for the purpose of cracking their self-confidence and/or ego.. it's kind of sad, really, especially because these "brave" souls can't even log in to say those kinds of things.. they have to snipe from the sidelines like good little cowards.. ;).
Re:another too quick to market jump.. (Score:2)
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Jeremy Katz