Linux on Older Hardware
sparrow_hawk writes: "One of Linux's strengths has always been the wide variety of older/obsolete hardware it supports. However, most modern distributions seem to assume that the user has a brand-new machine with processor and RAM to spare. Linux Journal reports on the RULE project (Run Up2Date Linux Everywhere). They are trying to come up with a low-resource-requirement, easy-to-use Linux installation for use on older hardware, intended as an option when you install Red Hat Linux. The FAQ has more information."
The why is RULE distributed on DVD?
(-;
STRANGELY, MOST WON'T REMEMBER WHERE
... Am I right?"
... January 22nd ...? 1998? ... the day Netscape decided to release the source code for its browser? Where the hell have you been?"
... Dec. 28? oh please ... think .... Dec. 28, 1969 ... Linus Torvald's birthday, for God's sake! ... Jesus, is everybody sleepwalking through life?"
THEY WERE DAY LINUX 2.4 RELEASED
Long-Awaited Operating System Upgrade Not Up There with JFK Assassination
SANTA CLARA, CAL. (SatireWire.com) -- In a study hardcore computer enthusiasts find "repulsive and unconscionable," at least 99.9 percent of the general population will have no special recollection of Jan. 4, 2001, the day the Linux 2.4 operating system was finally released.
"It's truly pathetic," said Linux evangelist Eric Raymond. "Not knowing where you were on Jan. 4, 2001, is like saying you can't recall exactly what you were doing on January 22, 1998, right?
For most adherents of Linux -- the open source alternative operating system to Windows and Unix -- life came to a standstill Jan. 4, and thousands scrambled to download the update. However, Stanford University researchers couldn't help but notice the feeling was not universal. "I was driving in my car when I heard on the radio that 2.4 was officially out, and I thought to myself, 'Wow, do I need to pull off the road to regain my composure?'" recalled sociologist and lead researcher Kirsten L. Anders. "And I realized, 'No.'"
That type of reaction galls programmers like Jens Boersk, an IBM system administrator who instantly emailed 75,000 IBM employees worldwide to alert them to the release. "I suggested everybody take the day off, and you know what I got for my trouble? A damn reprimand."
Boersk said he suspects Microsoft bribed people to feign apathy.
Added Raymond: "Oh c'mon
Raymond added that people shouldn't be allowed to use computers if they don't care about what has happened in the world since Dec. 28, 1969. "...What?
I am into the copy and paste.