``NetBSD Live!'' Boots Directly Into KDE2
jschauma writes: "A ``NetBSD Live!'' CD, which boots NetBSD/i386 1.5.2
directly from CDROM into KDE, including Koffice, has been made available. This exciting development may be the first step towards 'fancy' graphical installation CDs. Just grab one and carry it around with you, so you never have to boot any other OS! See the announcement on the NetBSD News page, more details are here."
This reminds me of the Suse technique of not actually providing installation images but providing something they call the "Live-Evaluation" cd... What it does is run the OS, with a minimum of configuration, off the CD.. nice for testing an OS withour installing, but I have my reservations - for example, you can't use the CD drive, and the lack of installation images is a real pain for actually installing the distro. I must say, it's nice if NetBSD does this, but only if they also keep providing actual installation images.
-raph
One of the ISO images is for Atari!
I really doubt NetBSD runs on the Atari ST, since that Motorola 68000-based machine doesn't have an MMU (and thus, no memory protection). But it sure can run on the 68030-based Atari TT and the mighty Falcon. BTW, Linux runs on these, too! A special fork of CLinux (the Linux without MMU , aimed at embedded implementations) existed to allow it to run on the original ST line of machines, but has been discontinued. Too bad I'm far from being a kernel hacker :-(
:-))
Remember, people: Atari LIVES ! Now, if someone would just make a PowerPC extension for the Falcon, the life would finally have a meaning
Xenu brings order!
Can anyone who has a faster pipe verify this?
The release notes appear to be hastily translated from German -- there are a couple "ist"s (where there should be "is"s).
I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
Now, this would kick great deals of ass if it was:
A) On natively rewritable media &
B) On media better suited to random access than CD (Just try accessing large numbers of small files on different secontions of the CD... Your CD will be about as fast as a floppy.
As I've been saying religiously for some time now, if all new system were sold with PCMCIA front-mounted slots, we'd finally have a format that could completely replace floppies, put CDs back in their place, and make it super easy to add any hardware you might want in your system.
Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
Remember, this is a CDROM. It's read only. That's mean you won't have a swap partition. Think about it.
A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
VM is handled the usual way using MMU, pages etc. :)
If it comes to swapping/paging, you can configure a local partition to do just that. If there's no backing store, the allocating process has a problem.
- Hubert
actually i do just that and i DOES increase performance... my win2k box has this nasty habit of needlessly swapping out data for apps suych as premeire even though i have 512 mb of ram... it seems to always want to keep 100 megs free so i set 256 or my ram to be ram disk and i set my default swap to there... i also have another REAL swap just in case i actually DO run out of ram...
unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
FreeBSD has good Linux emulation. It runs all software that runs on the Linux kernel. As long as just that is maintained, BSD can survive.
Yes, in smaller numbers, but smaller numbers are a smaller target and, well, more geekish...
When Windows dies, how you Tuxers going to handle being the boreing mainstream?
Zero Sum (don't amount to much). [root@localhost]