A Live Linux ISO for the Mac?
An anonymous reader asks: "My iBook is the strongest of my laptops, but it's not running my favorite OS. Knoppix and the various other live ISOs are nice for x86 machines, but (though OS X is nice, and I'm not disparaging it) it would be nice to have all the apps that come with KDE and GNOME, and to have them all available through a nice fluxbox or windowmaker desktop). I've seen smart people nearly cry trying to install Debian on their Macs, but then I've seen smart people nearly cry trying to install Debian in the first place. Knoppix has certainly made it easier to put Debian on x86 machines, but does such a thing exist for Macs? Mac OS X is a very pretty thing, and Apple has supported some great free software projects through it, it's just that on an older iBook (and older iMacs, even more so), a low-key GNU/Linux desktop moves more responsively, and has everything I need. If I could easily run a nice GNU system on them, old iMacs would be worth a lot more to me.".
Most of the problems I see people still having has to do with repartitioning a dual-boot sytem.
Never overestimate the end user. -jeramy b. smith
Yellow Dog Linux home page, here's a review on OS News.
:)
There really are no problems running Linux on Mac hardware.
I don't know if there are any Live distros for the Mac anymore... There used to be a version for LinuxPPC though, a release or two their most current release (which isn't all that current anyway). I am not sure if it was on a bootable CD- I think it was a 100-200 MB file you downloaded and double clicked "Boot LinuxPPC Live" and bam, you were in. No need for a CD, although that was prolly doable too.
Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
and you even want to run WindowMaker or Fluxbox, you don't need Linux.
All you need is Fink.
Your subject line describes the contents of your post perfectly. He's asking for a LIVE CD distribution, like Knoppix, except for PPC. Is that so hard to understand?
...wearing a skin-tight topless leather jumpsuit, with cutaway buttocks and transparent crotch panel.
Debian isn't really as hard as the poster says. While it may take a little trial and error, and you might have to rtfm Debian has in fact come a long way. I got my iBook online with debian, everything working, in the space of one weekend. The trick is researching what drivers you need and compiling a kernel (like the benh fork) before you try futzing with things. While there are a few random quirks with getting linux up in general, like how do you right/middle click, etc...They can be easily solved by doing a 30second google. But I have to say Apple has a history of not liking people doing strange things to their macs, if a live CD came out that made installing linux as easy as installing MacOS X then it would draw some negative attention from Apple I think. On the otherhand when my ibook suffered a logicboard melt down (semi-common occurence on my model) I sent in my ibook with debian still on the drive, and it came back fixed, good as new, with the boot loader still functioning and debian still on the drive.
-sonic
I'm running YDL on my 500Mhz iBook . Easy to install, easy to configure, all up quite good. Hardware support is fine. I haven't got the modem working yet but I believe others have.
But Debian's package management is absolutely superb. The Debian install is a little tricky and I believe there are a few quirks to the iBook setup. It'll probably take a few days before you have all the hardware working properly.
Ease of installation is probably somewhat overrated. Ideally you only install the operating system once. Day to day use of the installed OS and particularly package managaement, upgrades etc are much more important, and in my opinion Debian is the clear winner here.
Now wash your hands.
It was a demo and you couldn't save a state. Once you quit, any changes you made were lost.
"Form should follow function...unless it's just plain ugly."
Yes, I deliberately did not answer his question. I probably should have pointed that out. You, probably being a typical engineer, had a perfect literal comprehension of the question. However - I'm of the opinion that (like 99% of the people on Slashdot, probably including myself): the poster is an idiot who doesn't know what he wants. He's asking the wrong question. Read this again:
My iBook is the strongest of my laptops, but it's not running my favorite OS.
Okay, he wants to run Linux on his notebook.
I've seen smart people nearly cry trying to install Debian on their Macs
Gosh, so Debian is hard to install?
Knoppix has certainly made it easier to put Debian on x86 machines, but does such a thing exist for Macs?
He's thinking that he wants to run Knoppix because it can be installed as a clone of the CD - and there's zero setup!
I've tried Knoppix (have you?) and it's a nice concept that's a completely unusable waste of space when run from a CD. Talk about talking the advantages of Linux and throwing them all away by introducing a CD drive bottleneck that destroys anything resembling performance and - the killer - introduces instabilities. If you want Linux to crash and reboot frequently - run Knoppix from a CD. My average uptime of several attempts at running and randomly investigating programs: around 10 minutes (the same hardware is rock-solid under FreeBSD).
Also, given that the poster is going to be running on a notebook, I vouch that anyone wanting to run a Knoppix-like OS on a mobile machine from a CD (way to drain batteries even faster) - is either a madman or an idiot.
The poster clearly wants to do a real install, but can't get his head around Linux being easy to install with the right distro. He's stuck on a live filesystem, when that's not what he wants.
I have tried Mandrake PPC 9.1 on the iMac and like it alot. But as far as a live CD...Nope, never seen one.
Can anyone give me feedback on YDL 3.0 vs Mandrake 9.1?
Scott
I'm running OS 10.2.6 on my G3 and it runs pretty damned well, all things considered. Granted I have 1 gigabyte of SDRAM and fairly fast 7200 rpm ATA/133 drives but I'm impressed with the speed on my "lowly" 400 mhz G3 Power Mac tower. I think OS X can run adequately on any 300mhz+ G3 (iMac, iBook or Power Mac). Granted you don't want to play graphics-intensive games on it, but you wouldn't be interested in Linux (or to an extent Macs) if you wanted to play games anyway.
In summation, has the original poster even tried to run OS X on the iBook? I'd give it whirl before dismissing it as a possibility.
Have you checked out Fink?
Plenty of Unix/Linux Software for OSX.
I Googled for... livecd ppc linux http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/distributions/ gentoo/experimental/ppc/livecd/nostages/gentoo-ppc -1.4_rc6-120403.iso
use fink if you want to install these, combine it with the apple X11 distro and you have one smoothe integration of GNOME (my favorite) and 10.2
drop your pants and go to http://slackintosh.exploits.org, yes you have to roll your own iso, BUT it's slackware for ppc! (i use it on my ibook 600) otherwise check out gentoo or yellow dog for out-of-the-box goodness. dont forget to install pmud for all your apple power management needs.
"The chief enemy of creativity is 'good taste'" -Pablo Picasso
I'm not sure if this has everything you are looking for but, Gentoo has live CD's for PPC.
Here is some info
Here are the ISO's
The original powerbook g3 was a derivative of the 603 based powerbook 3400 and is not supported under Mac OS X. The Wallstreet powerbook is supported.
You have a second-rate chip and are willing to install a second-rate operating system
Why install a second rate operating system, when it has one already?
Yeah I'd say the poster doesn't know many smart people. First time I ever installed Debian it went perfectly, no problems whatsoever. And learning how to use apt took maybe another 5 minutes at the most.
If I can help an endearing woman watercolor artist/housewife, back in the late 1990's while working for Apple Enterprise Tech Support get Openstep 4.2 on a Toshiba Laptop with all the bells and whistles any 'smart' person with IT knowledge of hardware, device drivers and basic understandings of BIOS within the x86 realm should sure as hell know how to get Debian to install.
God how hard is it to download the disk images, burn them and boot off of CD? It's self explanatory.
And yes no distro seems to match even NeXTSTEP/Openstep's Installation process that now is part of OS X--that's a credit to the brilliance of the folks I as a peon was lucky to have bagels and cream cheese or playing foosball with (EOF Team were awesome players by the way)--but damn if you can't handle that for sure what hope is there for the general consumer to be able to install, outside of the RedHat world or SUSE world?
I'm trying to figure out what's stopping you from downloading the latest Trolltech source, compiling it for OS X and using OS X's xfree86's Quartz optimized X Server, then either compile KDE from source yourself by changing some of the configuration flags, or seeing if there are available packages already via Fink.
Debian is really a lot easier to install on an ibook than it is on x86 hardware. There's no fuss setting up XF86 or finding out about device drivers; all hardware is well known. .config which comes with BenH's patch, and on you go.
Install Debian, grab the latest benh kernel if your ibook is less than a year old (I don't know whether older ones need it too), compile with the
If you fail to get it right, a question on the debian-powerpc list is bound to get an answer within a few hours; the ibook is one of the most used ppc computers it seems.
You get me a PPC, and i'll consider porting a few Morphix modules to it. Problem with Mac's is that they are so damn expensive, but it would make an interesting challenge, as livecd ppc booting was certainly possible last time i checked. Oh well, shouldn't offer this, as before i know it i'll actually be forced into making one... Cheers, Alex de Landgraaf www.morphix.org
This sig is intentionally left blank
Gentoo has a PPC Live CD that will boot on any G3 or G4 Mac... the purpose of their live cd is more for installation purposes though than anything else, there's no X.
I've been playing with lots of distros for PPC for a couple of years. YDL 3.0 seems buggy, Linux PPC is outdated. Mandrake is nice to my rev A iMac, but xine does not work at all. I would love to use Debian on that machine, but it will not allow me to properly configure X.
Scott
If a live CD came out that made installing linux as easy as installing MacOS X then it would draw some negative attention from Apple I think.
Why? Apple makes pretty close to 100% of their profits on hardware sales. Software is just a way to sell hardare. They have had no objections to the Unix crowd that likes the iBook/Linux combination. Linux customers are customers that pay them lots of money and then they don't even have to support. Its hard to see Apple's downside.
Okay, it's not live...
but I've successfully run Debian and FreeBSD from a Virtual PC image. It's like having a spare unix.
(If you don't understand this, you obviously don't know who I am.... Those who do will laugh. Those who don't will read my bio and then laugh. )
120 character sigs suck. Make it 250.
This may be a stupid question, but why is all of the discussion being had about laptops as opposed to the other apple proucts (i.e. my DP 867 tower)? Is there something specific about running linux distros on an ibook that is that much different than a tower? Or is it just that its so stinking cool to have an apple laptop running linux?
I only ask because I am seeing a ton of discussion concentrated on the laptops, when I would think the same information should work on a tower.
Please forgive my ignorance.
I am running OSX 10.2.6 on a fairly modest PowerMac G4 500MHz, 256MB SDRAM, and I'd say that it performs fairly well. One thing, however, is that the Aqua GUI isn't as resposive as I'd like it to be on the lowly ATI Rage128 video card in the machine. Nonetheless, I really do not see the point of running even a Live Linux ISO, as OSX is quite sufficient in the *nix department. And now that the X11 beta is out, I really wouldn't see much use of running Linux on a Mac either. There are many options available that do not require Linux in my opinion, and X11 is one of them.
This guy is looking for a LIVE ISO. I too am looking for something like a Knoppix for PPC. I don't want to install YDL or Debian or slackware or anything. I want to have OS X installed and be able to boot into linux with a working KDE/GNOME desktop that has available applications all off of the cd (ie. no HD required. ie. Knoppix). I'll restate the posters original question, "Does anyone know if something like what was described above exists?".
Install X11 and fink, and you can compile many of them to run on OSX.
Gentoo saw this discussion and prepared two LiveCD .iso images. Are people discussing this here?
See:
http://www.gentoo.org/