SuSE Coming on DVD 155
SuSE has announced that its next release, 6.3, will be available on DVD as well as CD. The release date is supposedly December. I hope this practce catches on. Debian 2.1 was 2 discs for just binaries, and it's much larger now. I have a 6 disc set of SuSE 6.2. The packaging is both neat and clumsy. Too bad the only DVD player I own is connected to my stereo....
Found a SCSI DVD-RAM... (Score:2)
APS Tech [apstech.com] has a SCSI DVD-RAM [apstech.com], but their DVD-ROMs are all IDE. :(
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Re:(response, getting slightly OT and onto USB) (Score:1)
#define UNINFORMED_SPECULATION
I guess Linus is either working on a modified devfs or an alternative scheme that will satisfy the naysayers.
#endif
Or he is waiting for someone else to come up with the "right" solution, as he did with the big memory on Intel.
Jeroen Nijhof
Q: Pricing (Score:1)
Re:DVD availability (Score:2)
Re:Installing packages after installation? (Score:1)
Re:Debian status (Score:1)
Uhm, no. I think all debs are compressed gzip and I know that all of them that I've ever looked at are.
Or more accurately, they are 'ar' archives of a few packaging files, with the actual binaries from the package in a gzipped tar file.
For example, take a look at the latest grep deb, grep_2.3-7_i386.deb:
The file data.tar.gz contains the actual package binaries, man pages, etc., while the control.tar.gz file contains the installation and removal scripts
bloat? (Score:1)
It seems like a great idea to put linux on dvd if it's so big it won't go on a single/double cd. But WHY is it so big?? I've never delved much into suse but it just seems rather big if it needs 4+ cds. Even M$ don't make an OS that big, and linux is supposed to be small & compact? Something just doesn't add up in my mind. Is it that these distros come with loads of apps which aren't actually part of the OS? In which case, can you get just the OS on one cd?
Baldur's Gate *IS* available on DVD (Score:1)
Publishers will continue to release CDROM versions as long as they think it makes economic sense to do so, as they did with floppies. When something you really want comes out only on DVD, don't pout too much: 2X DVD-ROM drives are down to $40.
Re:Great! (Score:1)
Will this be the test for obsolete removable media? I mean, if it takes any more than one piece of media (i.e. one cd, or one floppy) to store a program or distribution of an operating system, is that an accurate sign that its time for something new? CDs seem to have become old technology before ever maturing. Sure, you can record and even re-write them, but the recordable drives were never as cheap and ubiquitous as floppy drives. I'm still waiting for a replacement for the floppy. Maybe DVD will be it.
Re:Too bad S.u.S.e doesn't boot PowerPC's :( (Score:1)
Re:FTP over what? (Score:2)
debian (Score:1)
/me wakes up and realizes i don't have dvd drive and neither does just about any one else
Re:DVD availability (Score:2)
Re:FTP (this doesn't match my experience) (Score:1)
SuSE on CD, RE: size of SuSE (Score:1)
DVD support for linux? (Score:2)
I may be missing the boat here, but I thought DVD drives weren't supported by linux. I mean, I'm using one right now, but Linux thinks it's a plain old ATAPI CD-ROM. I assume that the proverbial "bad things" will happen if i try to read a DVD-ROM. . .
Wouldn't make much sense to distribute an OS on a medium the OS can't use, would it?
Re:This will be nice (Score:1)
Re:bloat? (Score:1)
More bits for less $$$, I can't complain.
Your Working Boy,
Re:Too bad S.u.S.e doesn't boot PowerPC's :( (Score:1)
Yet.. you are right.. it IS the pci card that's required.
They still neglected to mention such on the phone.
(Sorry I don't know more about macs... I prefer Motorola chips in big-iron machines)
This will be nice (Score:1)
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Bootable DVDs/CD-ROMs (Score:1)
Mina Inerz
Mina Inerz [N. Reinking]
Well now that everyone's hopped on the bandwagon (Score:1)
Bootable DVDs/CD-ROMs (Score:1)
Mina Inerz [N. Reinking]
Re:Well now that everyone's hopped on the bandwago (Score:2)
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Re:FTP over what? (Score:1)
cool.. (Score:1)
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Re:FTP (this doesn't match my experience) (Score:1)
could you boot of a DVD? (Score:1)
how much $ for it? how much for blank DVDs?
Re:I'm having flashbacks... (Score:1)
A simple answer for Justin (Score:3)
Just remember to crank the volume way up, to reduce data loss from background noise. (eg: Neighbors screaming at you to turn that b* racket off)
FTP (Score:1)
Re:FTP (this doesn't match my experience) (Score:1)
-l
DVD Boot (Score:1)
But are there cheap DVD *BURNERS* (Score:2)
Until that time, I'm quite happy using the so mature they're dead cheap technology of CD-ROMs.
Re:[OT - Grammar] (Score:1)
Be that as it may, I am not against the "learning by doing" methodology in and of itself. Rather, my concern is that English teachers take so little interest in fact whilst delving so much into the world of fiction.
$0.02USD,
-l
Slashdot needs a DVD icon! (Score:1)
And is there a USB icon, too?
timothy
Multiple Distros/versions on DVD? (Score:1)
Re:DVD support for linux? (Score:2)
cheapbytes: not yet (Score:1)
Basically, they said "not yet." The price-per-disk is coming down nicely, but the hefty set-up cost makes them wary of titles that won't sell well. They're waiting for better market penetration of the drives.
Bootable DVD? (Score:1)
Bootable DVD? (Score:1)
I guess DVD's really are catching on now. I thought it was one of those fad technologies like LaserDiscs or DAT audio tapes. This is a step in the right direction for the whole software industry.
DVD Burners (Score:1)
widescreen, subtitles, omitted scenes (Score:1)
How about linux installer subtitles in 87 languages? Simultaneously too?
Re:DVD support for linux? (Score:2)
Re:I'm having flashbacks... (Score:2)
I had win95 beta on floppies, that was fun ~21 floppies. OS2 was about the same.
DVD (Score:1)
I think that it needs to be renamed, DVD is obviously used for more then video now. I would think that eventually it would replace CDs, used to music, video, and of course data.
-Zach
DVD and FreeBSD (Score:1)
They are very rare, so I'm definitely going to keep it for myself
Anywho... it's nice to see that more and more orgs and companies are making DVD-ROM a very reliable and smart storage solution. I wouldn't mind buying a subscription of DVD's that mirror the data on ftp.cdrom.com
Re:Great! (Score:1)
s/Video/Versatile/ (Score:2)
Re:FTP over what? (Score:1)
~luge
Re: (Score:1)
Re:About bloody time... (Score:1)
-Chris
SuSE on your Stereo (Score:1)
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Too bad S.u.S.e doesn't boot PowerPC's :( (Score:1)
DVD player he had installed when he bought it...
The one they didn't tell him he needed extra software (==$400) to watch movies with.
Don'tcha just love build it yourself Macintosh ordering personell?
(No.. I wasn't around when he ordered it, or that wouldn't have happened)
Re:Slashdot needs a DVD icon! (Score:2)
Reminds me of this one conversation I overheard in a library. A bunch of posers trying to look intellectual were talking about how they "got on the information superhighway by running Netscape. What's it that Netscape is... oh yeah, it's an icon."
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"'Is not a quine' is not a quine" is a quine.
Re:annoying, but almost necessary now (Score:1)
On DVD!!!!! Hopefully Subtitled! (Score:1)
ttyl
Farrell
Re:This will be nice (Score:1)
then S.u.S.E invented the universe with Linus quietly sanctified.
Off I go, in search of a DVD drive.
Thank you very much.
Re:Could be a boon -- or a curse. (Score:2)
Booting DVD (Score:1)
I do not know if there is a spec for bootable DVDs. The spec for bootable CDs is called "El Torrito" and is an extention to iso 9660. I don't think that there is any similar spec for DVD's. (What do they use, UFS or something like that?)
-P
Installing packages after installation? (Score:1)
DVD is coming (Score:1)
Remember how long it took for CD's to take over the software distribution. For a long time the software was being distributed on floppy (first 5 1/4, then 3 1/2), until now software only comes on CD. Be patient, it will come.
Could be a boon -- or a curse. (Score:2)
However, it might be a nifty boost to the multi-distro folks. Imagine a DVD with just the GPL'd versions of multiple distros, and one front-end that asks for which installer to use...
It'd be nice if they bring back the live filesystem with the main distribution rather than as a separate product.
Or, say others could package a minimalist distro, a full-featured distro, and a BSD or two onto the same disc. Or a distro plus a Sunsite pub/linux mirror...
And so forth.
Re:Woohoo (Score:1)
wise move by the suse team, those crazy germans.
drives and disks. (Score:1)
--
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
DVD stands for DVD (Score:3)
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Re:DVD support for linux? (Score:2)
The only problem you'd see by inserting a DVD movie (for instance) and copying files from it, is if the disk is encrypted. You'd then get an error in your logs stating that a "read of scrambled sector without authentication". For your run-off-the-mill porn, you could probably get by without any problems :)
Can you boot Linux off a DVD? (Score:1)
Re:How about SCSI DVD-ROM drives? (Score:2)
The Pioneer U03S is an excellent SCSI DVD-ROM (6x). A SCSI version of their new 10x DVD-ROM will be (is?) released. The 10x is RPC-2 protected. The 6x is not (As long as you do not remove the RPC jumper).
ByeThis guy is really a laugh riot! (Score:1)
Re:Can you boot Linux off a DVD? (Score:1)
I think it'll work. I mean, you really just need a drive to read DVD formatted discs, but you need a decoder card/software to decode the movies and such.
Later . . .
Re:Well, I suppose its a good thing (Score:1)
Great! (Score:1)
DVD availability (Score:1)
I realize they are going to be making the CD set -- but will their be a cost difference etc to compensate for the extra 5-6 0.2 cent disks?
I'm pretty sure DVD's are the same cost to produce as CD, could be mistaken -- but I am having flashbacks of the transition from floppy to CD-Rom... if I have to mail off to get a set of CD-Rom's I'm going to be a bit irritated..
-= Making the world a better place =-
Funny how it gets bigger... (Score:1)
Now it comes on a DVD. Odd that this is the same system you can install on a matchbox sized server.
Director's Cut (Score:2)
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Re:A simple answer for Justin (Score:1)
Aah, sweet nostalgia.
It's just like owning a Spectrum again.
Re:cool..Booting DVD's (Score:1)
I'm guessing it's the same all around, because it uses mostly the same data standards. Just more data
-= Making the world a better place =-
Re:Well now that everyone's hopped on the bandwago (Score:1)
And of course the little side effect of drastically increased storage capacity means nothing.
Why is it that techie types seem to get obsessed about the technology behind the result and sometimes act like the technology behind something is everything, when the technology is nothing more than a means to an end, and the end is what is really important.
Woohoo (Score:2)
Debian status (Score:1)
Potato has 1.78 GB of binary-i386
over 4100 packages.
There is supposed to be an anouncement on the debian feature freeze today.
Re:cool.. (Score:1)
Re:Well, I suppose its a good thing (Score:1)
If I'm wrong, I apologize
DVD Bootability questions not answered (Score:1)
Re:Bootable DVD? (Score:1)
ATAPI/SCSI drive - if your BIOS supports booting
off an ordinary CD-ROM drive, it will handle
DVD too.
DVD is a beautiful thing... (Score:1)
Also would like to add that kudos to SuSE for this one. They consistently have the most complete distro, even if they try to install everything in German... I just hope that they keep all of the great things involved in the OS. The live filesystem, the bootable CD, etc. We use the live system cd here often for troubleshooting.
~Jason Maggard
"God, Root, what is difference?"
-Pitr
Re:Well, I suppose its a good thing (Score:1)
Re:DVD Bootability questions not answered (Score:1)
DVD-Video discs are REQUIRED to be in UDF-bridge format, which includes ISO 9660.
(response, getting slightly OT and onto USB) (Score:3)
Well, you're right: DVD and USB are different things.
Re: DVD -- there might not be that many non-movie DVD articles here, but in truth it's the movie-related ones I'm interested in mostly. I think it's cool that SuSE will have a DVD distro, though! (Didn't FreeBSD have a DVD distro starting months ago? Or was that strictly a hypothetical?) I like it partly because it will encourage more people to buy DVD drives for their massive storage -- and hopefully then want more from the hardware they've already paid for. The more Free / free OS users with DVD drives, the better as far as I'm concerned. There have been a string of hope-inspiring bits about DVD lately, as the software and hardware under Linux (and hopefully soon for the BSDs) come together. And as that happens (there are several projects working on Linux video already
And as for USB, I disagree that there are no articles dealing with it -- it's been a pretty good topic of conversation, especially when it comes to discussing what will be in upcoming kernels. And there ought to be more! USB devices are handy and no longer a curiosity in either the Mac or Windows worlds
Thumbing through a magazine ("Digital Camera"? Something like that) at a local bookstore a few hours ago, I also noticed a screen-color calibration device -- with a USB connection. There are all sorts of devices which use USB -- input devices (including bar code readers), storage devices, printes, scanners, blah blah blah
And about the people in the library
Cheers,
timothy
Re:DVD Bootability questions not answered (Score:2)
btw: HUGE DVD information link http://www.unik.no/~robert/hifi/dvd/world.html
Re:I got it (Score:2)
Re:(response, getting slightly OT and onto USB) (Score:2)
However, there is a considerable hurdle that needs to be dealt with before USB support is truly seamless. USB devices are designed to be hot-swapped, and there can be 127 of them on the one bus. There are many, many, different types of USB devices. If you located an entry in the /dev directory for every single possible device, there would be literally thousands of entries. In addition (and I'm not a kernel hacker so I'm not exactly clear how this works) each of those entries in the /dev directory is actually a kind of pointer to a "device". Devices are each given a number, and it turns out that USB would probably exhaust the number of permissible devices.
So what's the solution? Obviously we need some kind of scheme to allocate entries in /dev, and device numbers, dynamically. Such a scheme exists already as a kernel patch called devfs. This hack allocates devices dynamically as required, and according to its backers basically solves the problem.
However, there are a lot of important kernel hackers who don't like devfs, for reasons I don't understand but these guys presumably wouldn't object just for the hell of it. The debate has raged for a considerable time now, even before the USB problem put more pressure on to find a solution. As I understand it, while Linus hasn't included devfs in the mainstream kernel, he has basically not commented on the flamewars.
So, what's the solution?
#define UNINFORMED_SPECULATION
I guess Linus is either working on a modified devfs or an alternative scheme that will satisfy the naysayers.
#endif
Hopefully a solution will arrive before the 2.4 kernel is released.
multi-distro DVDs (Score:2)
--
Matt Singerman
annoying, but almost necessary now (Score:2)
Also, to answer another poster, the potato freeze is being postponed until at least Nov 7, basically the holdup is the boot floppies - it's a bad idea to go into a freeze without working boot floppies.
Re:could you boot of a DVD? (Score:2)
Speaking of DVDs as install media .. (Score:2)
please mail me if you have this dvd
Re:Wait, wait! You can't do that! (Score:2)
However, I'd hope they continue to use CD-ROM for those who don't yet have DVD.
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Well, I suppose its a good thing (Score:2)
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Linux on DIVX. Pay per install! (Score:2)
Wait, wait! You can't do that! (Score:4)
Pay up! Yep, that means you future mp3 DVD burners too!
:)
But seriously, this is great. While the rest of the world is getting excited about DVD movies and mega-games, I think the greatest thing about DVDs are more space! Just think: all the binary packages AND the source on ONE disk.
Oh yeah!
***Beginning*of*Signiture***
Linux? That's GNU/Linux [gnu.org] to you mister!