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Yellow Dog Linux 3.0 Hits Mirrors

Morganic writes "After checking periodically for the past couple days, I noticed that YDL 3.0 has hit the mirrors, a day early (in fact, the page above still says it's not available, but the mirrors at the bottom are carrying it). Anyone got a BitTorrent?"

8 of 71 comments (clear)

  1. ....7 Years of Bad Luck! by AtariAmarok · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Yellow Dog Linux 3.0 Hits Mirrors" ....Just what Yellow Dog Linux needs, 7 years of bad luck for each mirror broken.

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    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  2. Changes... by icemax · · Score: 4, Informative
    Yellow Dog Linux version 3.0 is Terra Soft's most recent release which offers a completely rebuilt Installer, 1300 packages on 6 CDs (3 Install, 3 Source), a unified KDE and GNOME desktop environment featuring shared menus, applications, and user interface. With enhanced support for the latest ATI and NVidia graphics cards (full 3D support for the ATI Radeon series), "video issues" are a thing of the past.

    Very nice!
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    __________
    Love conquers all... except CANCER
  3. Yellow Dog Linux 3.0 Hits Mirrors by NanoGator · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Yellow Dog Linux 3.0 Hits Mirrors" ...a handful of people rejoice! :-)

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    "Derp de derp."
  4. Re:Is Bit Torrent faster? by mhesseltine · · Score: 5, Informative

    I understand the concept of BitTorrent, but is it a faster download or is it just being nice to Terra Soft's poor little mirrors?
    It's a bit of both. Because you are sharing up/down bandwidth with other users, you may find that you can d/l from 5 people each @ 200Kbps, for a d/l of 1Mbps, which may be more than the one mirror can handle. Also, since the downloads come from peers, it does reduce the bandwidth necessary for the mirror to provide.

    For more info on BT, visit the official BitTorrent site.

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  5. There's nothing "OS X-only" about them by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Informative

    Apple hasn't done anything to prevent any other OS from booting on the new machines; it simply isn't updating Mac OS 9 to support them any longer. Nothing sinister, nothing crippled, no "blocking".

    That said, Yellow Dog Linux supports machines as the team has the chance to add such support. It already supports, for instance, the 12" PowerBook and the Xserve family. They may be a little behind the latest product introductions, but support will always be added.

  6. Re:Why bother? by Eagle7 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I cannot stand the UI in OS X (I am too attached to X Windows, with X style copy & paste, multiple desktops with edge flipping, and sloppy focus). And the OS X mouse driver sucks - the acceleration (AFAIK) is horrible and not adjustable, and none of the third party utilities for it have made it usable enough for me.

    That, and after 6 or 7 years, I just understand and am comfortable with Linux.

    Not that I don't think OS X is a good and/or capable OS, and that some of the iApps are really slick. But being comfortable with the UI is #1 with me, and I just can't get comfortable with OS X's UI. Really the only think I miss running Linux on my iBook (read: have to boot into OS X for) is playing DVDs on my TV. And Flash I guess. Other than that, it's perfect.

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    _sig_ is away
  7. Re:Why bother? by MalleusEBHC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Heh, ya couldn't see this one coming a mile away...

    Some Linux die-hards buy Apple laptops because they are the nicest laptops around. These people are just really into Linux, so they don't want OS X.

    Another major use is for older computers. Pretty much any OldWorld machine is going to be too slow to enjoy OS X. Throwing Linux on these machines can extend their usefulness. They can be used as fileservers, routers, mp3 players, etc. Some people also use them as their main desktop, although I personally think Mac OS is just fine for older computers.

    However, I think it is rather foolish to run Linux on newer Apple hardware. OS X is just too uber-cool. Besides, the only thing I've found that runs on Linux but not on OS X is MOL, but amazingly I've gotten by so far without it. ;) But to each his own, and if Linux users want to buy Apple hardware, I'm glad they are supporting my favorite computer company.

  8. Re:Newbie question. by ramdam · · Score: 4, Informative

    Mac OSX only runs on modern mac with lot of RAM (read 256+) and good video card.

    I have older PM 6500 and Imac Rev B that can't run Mac OS X (not supported, not enough RAM, not enough CPU power).

    I've installed YellowDogLinux 2.3 on both, it just works ;-)

    I don't feel the need to upgrade to 3.0 since they are used headless, as servers not as desktop.