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Slackware Turns 10

Sir_Stinksalot writes "DistroWatch is reporting that Slackware is 10. 'Yes folks, it is exactly 10 years today since the release of Slackware Linux 1.0, complete with a brand new Linux kernel 0.99pl11 Alpha, XFree86 1.3 and even a PS/2 mouse support!' Let's all say happy birthday to Slackware."

16 of 341 comments (clear)

  1. First Release Annoucement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    From: bf703@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Patrick J. Volkerding)
    Newsgroups: comp.os.linux
    Subject: ANNOUNCE: Slackware Linux 1.00
    Date: 17 Jul 1993 00:16:36 GMT
    Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH (USA)
    Lines: 76
    Message-ID:
    Reply-To: bf703@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Patrick J. Volkerding)
    NNTP-Posting-Host: hela.ins.cwru.edu

    The Slackware Linux distribution (v. 1.00) is now available for
    anonymous FTP. This is a complete installation system designed for
    systems with a 3.5" boot floppy. It has been tested extensively with
    a 386/IDE system. The standard kernel included does not support SCSI,
    but if there's a great demand, I might be persuaded to compile a few
    custom kernels to put up for FTP.

    This release is based largely on the SLS system, but has been enhanced and
    modified substantially. There are two main disk series, A (13 disks) and
    X (11 disks). Some of the features:

    Series A:
    About what you'd expect from SLS series A, B, and C. Plus:
    Source for the Linux DOS emulator version 0.49.
    The FAQ for kernel level 99pl10.
    Kernel source and image at .99pl11 Alpha.
    [compiled with these options: math emulation support, normal hard drive
    support, TCP/IP, System V IPC, -m486, minix fs, ext2 fs, msdos fs, nfs,
    proc support, and PS/2 style mouse support. You may need to recompile if
    you have some other type of busmouse. The kernel was compiled with libc
    4.4.1, g++ 2.4.5]
    The new keytable utilities.
    The NET-2 networking package, preconfigured to use loopback.
    A public domain version of ksh, and tcsh 6.04 (with the bugs worked out)
    GNU gcc, g++, and Objective-C at versions 2.4.5
    Includes and libraries at version 4.4.1
    mailx, quota utilities, experimental winapi source, sound drivers.
    The TCL toolkit and samples.

    In addition, the installation program has been improved to offer more
    information about the packages (and the installation procedure itself)
    as you install.

    The install program can also automatically install LILO, configuring it
    to boot either from your master boot record or from OS/2's Boot Manager.

    Series X:
    Also, all the packages you would get in the SLS X series, plus:
    XFree-86 version 1.3.
    Open Look Virtual Window Manager made the default window manager.
    XS3 server offers support for S3 based video cards.
    XV 3.00 Image viewer is included.
    PEX files from the XFree-86 distribution are included.

    Although TEX support is not included in the Slackware release, the you may
    install the SLS T series from the install program.

    At this point, the install disk itself is running .99pl8. I'm working on it :^)
    Also, installation from other than a 3.5" floppy has not been tested, but might
    work. 5.25" floppy will not work because of file sizes. At this point, I have
    no plans to support a 5.25" version.

    How to get the Slackware(tm) release:

    The Slackware release may be obtained be anonymous FTP from
    mhd3.moorhead.msus.edu in directory /pub/linux/slackware. At least initially,
    this release will be in the form of 3.5" disk images which should be copied
    to floppies using the RAWRITE.EXE program, or dd under Linux.

    Please note that our FTP software does not support limiting the number of
    concurrent anonymous logins. PLEASE try to go easy on this machine. If things
    get out of hand, access may be restricted.

    Other sites are, of course, welcome to help out with the load by mirroring
    the distribution.

    If you find any problems with the distribution, or if you have any suggestions
    for improvements, please let me know. If you know of more up-to-date versions
    of software in the distribution, I'd like to hear about that, too.

    --
    Patrick Volkerding
    volkerdi@mhd1.moorhead.msus.edu
    bf703

    1. Re:First Release Annoucement by elefantstn · · Score: 5, Funny
      From the good-thing-Slashdot-didn't-exist-yet dept:

      Please note that our FTP software does not support limiting the number of concurrent anonymous logins. PLEASE try to go easy on this machine. If things get out of hand, access may be restricted.
      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    2. Re:First Release Annoucement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      mailx, quota utilities, experimental winapi source, sound drivers.

      Wine, is that you? Oh man, remember that crazy summer of 1993?!

  2. I remember ... by torpor · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... when Slackware was released... I think it was by SLS, no, which mean "Soft Landing Systems".

    Of course, happy with my Yggdrasil installation (woohoo, a bootable CD distro - in 1992! With X!) I scoffed at the notion of there being yet *another* Linux distro around.

    Little did I know, 10 years later, that there would be thousands of Linux choices around. Wow.

    Happy birthday Slackware! One of these days, I ought to give you a try ... :)

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  3. WHAT? SLACKWARE 10?!? by strredwolf · · Score: 5, Funny

    ALREADY?!?!? Geesh oh wiz, I got to upgrade *AGAIN*?!?!?

    --

    --
    # Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
    $Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
  4. Okay for retro purposes by Jack+Wagner · · Score: 5, Funny
    I can't, in good faith, offer slackwear up as an option to any of my clients though. They need a world class installation and they need cutting edge features like Gnome 2.2 and Mozilla 1.4.

    Sure, slack is fun to dink around with and it's nice for a sense of history and all that but today as a business about the only distro I can quote out is Linux 9.0. In todays market customers want support and they want to see a product comes in a box with decals and installation books. Fortuen 500 companies don't really care about the "cool" factor.

    Warmest regards,
    --Jack

    --


    Wagner LLC Consulting Co. - Getting it right the first time
  5. bash# w by Trigun · · Score: 5, Funny

    11:20:29 up 3651 days, 22:40, 1 user, load average: 0.09, 0.07, 0.02

  6. Good reusable announcement by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Funny

    From the initial Slackware release announcement :

    There are two main disk series, A (13 disks) and X (11 disks).

    In a not-so-distant future, Linux distros will also come on 13 disks. Only not on floppy disks. That's how much GNU/Linux has evolved since the early days ...

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  7. Re:The troll in me asks... by acidtripp101 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On a serious note... that's kind of the point. Slackware has NEVER been geared towards being 'better' or 'faster' than anything else. It just tries to be as stable and trustworthy as it can. I know of someone that runs a very large mud (about 400-500 people on all the time) on slackware. Been running it for several years now and has never upgraded his base system. No need to.

    --
    Not Free(as in beer). Free(as in "I'm free to beat you over the head for being a dumbass")
  8. Installed on a ZIP disk by luugi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Slackware was my first linux distribution. I used to work at "Bureau en Gros" ( I think it's "Business Depot" in english). I was working in the computer section and this guy ask me about Linux. I thought it was a game at first. But then he told me that it was something new and cool but very complicated. I found the CDs for him in bin. That same day I got myself a copy and wanted to install it on my computer. By then I just thought it was an application. Reading on, I realised that I need a different partition. I read up on it and installed my first Linux system on a 100 Meg zip disk. It was the coolest thing for me. I spent most of my time trying to figure out how to do the simplest things but it was really fun. I had an slow computer at the time ( Pentium 60Hz) and the newer games didn't install on my computer anymore so I had to find myself another way of having fun.

    And now I get paid to program device drivers on Linux!

    --
    Think like a man of action, act like a man of thought.
  9. My First Time... by nfdavenport · · Score: 5, Funny

    I remember my first time with slackware way back when in college. I couldn't download it, because I needed to get linux up and running in the first place so I could dial-up to the CS modem pool and PPP. So I went the bookstore, bought a huge stack of floppies and tried 3 times to copy all the distro disks before I got it right - back and forth all day to campus.

    Problem was I was copying *.* instead of * to the each floppy having come from a DOS background. That wasn't nearly as bad as blowing my $800 monitor the next day trying to setup X timings. Ahh, the good old days.

  10. Hopefully.... by dook43 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Slackware users and experts can make a vow, on Slackware's 10th birthday, to be more helpful to new users and Linux newbies. Many a new Linux user has been turned away from Slackware because, although a geek friend might have pointed it out, there is no help or regard for the newbies. RTFM/RTFD!!! is the most common phrase heard in #slackware on many different IRC servers everywhere. This is the same situation for Debian. New users to Linux who want an extremely powerful distribution, complete with friendly help and knowledgeable users who aren't afraid to help a newbie, even if they ask a duplicated question, should check out Gentoo.

    --
    This comment was randomly generated by a school of piranhas chewing on the PCB of a Microsoft Natural Keyboard.
  11. Re:Anyone tried it out? by AndroidCat · · Score: 5, Informative
    I've still got my Slackware 1.2 CD, and I have it running on a 486/66 on my LAN. It fits nicely on to a small hard drive and there's tonnes of archive software that runs fine on it. It ran my multi-user BBS stable for years. It hasn't got all the latest bells'n'whistles, and I don't know if I'd expose it to the Internet, but it does the job.

    Why shouldn't it still run??

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  12. Re:Ironically.... by Trigun · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ahh, we all remember our firsts don't we?

    Unfortunately, this is turning more and more into a high-school reunion. My first was Sally Henderson.

    So was mine!
    Me too!
    Over here!

    I'm going to shower now. I feel sick.

  13. Re:Anyone tried it out? by The+Phantom+Buffalo · · Score: 5, Funny
    Disclaimer: I don't know how to spell

    Your math isn't that great either.

  14. My first contact with Linux ... by Etyenne · · Score: 5, Insightful


    darkstar login :

    --
    :wq