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Knoppix 3.3 Is Out

maedls.at writes "After 6 months of development, the latest version of Knoppix 3.3 is out - Kernel 2.4.22 with HIGHMEM (4GB) support, KDE 3.1.3, XFree86 4.3, OpenOffice 1.0.3 (German and English), KOffice 1.2.1, new boot options for RAM or hard-disk preload of the CD. Possibility to create a persistent homedir with personal data and desktop settings on a memory stick or similar, optional with AES encryption." The main Knoppix site is still down in protest of European software patent legislation (click on the link inside the English paragraph to get to the meat of the site), but the excellent knoppix.net has a detailed changelog.

10 of 430 comments (clear)

  1. What you don't look at the page first? by OS24Ever · · Score: 5, Informative
    --

    As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

  2. Re:Dammit! by OS24Ever · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'll paypal you the $0.10 that disc cost you if you'd like.

    --

    As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

  3. Knoppix still king of bootable CDs by proxima · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Though other bootable CDs like morphix look promising, I'm impressed with the rate at which Knoppix moves forward. Knoppix has consistently displayed nice polish visually and in terms of usability.

    As it's debian-based, I'm hoping some more of the hardware-detection, auto-setup, and visual polish can make it to stock Debian (yes, I know you can "upgrade" to full Debian after booting knoppix). The boot process is cleaned up and functional for new users to Linux, and the speed is remarkable for loading a compressed image off a CD (so long as you have 128+ megs of RAM).

    Kudos to those who work and contribute to Knoppix for producing such a quality assembly of open source software in such a useful form.

    --
    "The universe seems neither benign nor hostile, merely indifferent." --Carl Sagan
  4. Sweet. brltty support by gmhowell · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A bit unusual, but knoppix has included brltty support from their live CD. That, quite frankly, is cool as shit. Props to the coders, and the fanboys who keep 'em coding.

    (brltty is a driver that allows text to be output to braille displays, typically used by the blind and the deaf-blind. Read my journal for a little bit more info.)

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  5. Re:Why no OpenOffice.org 1.1.0? by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 5, Insightful

    OOo 1.1.0 is still in the release candidate state.

    Knopper is very limited by space. Perhaps he didn't want to include software that's still in the testing phase? There's alot of software available in Debian unstable (contrib) , but not all of it is production-ready.

    RC4 only came out a few weeks ago, and it does take some time for the Knoppix folks to put out a release ("... After 6 months of development... ").

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  6. Jesus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    They're just now coming out with HIGHMEM [sic] support? MSDOS had HIMEM.SYS like 15 years ago. Great, now I can load my Lunix mouse driver above 640k! Thanks a bunch!

  7. flaming debian-legal list=legal issues? by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mplayer has too many legal issues, but Xine is OK?
    *rolling eyes*

    If that's Xnoppix's reason, they've been reading debian-legal too much and comparing the code too little. If Mplayer has "legal issues", then so does Xine. Both players can decrypt DVDs, both can use borrowed win32 codecs, both use algorithms that are subject to patents (in the US). Where's the difference? The Mplayer devs got into a nasty flamewar with debian-legal people, and the Xine team didn't.

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    0 1 - just my two bits
  8. Knoppix and Laks Watch Sav ed Me by rossz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, it saved my wife. The hard drive in her laptop died. Normally, there's a 3 year warranty on them, but Hewlett-Packard being the cheap fucktards that they are OEMed the drive and reduced the warranty to 1 year. So my 15 month old drive is useless. Oops, I digress.

    Money is rather tight, so I wasn't able to get a replacement drive immediately. However, my wife needed internet access at the minimum. Knoppix to the rescue. She was able to get full blown internet access and email. With the addition of my Laks watch with its 128Meg of memory, she had a persistent home directory so her settings (e.g. bookmarks) weren't lost.

    I definately feel Knoppix was worth the money I spent on it. Oh wait! It was free! Damn. Such a deal! Seriously. Keep a Knoppix CD handy at all times. Its a life saver.

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    -- Will program for bandwidth
  9. FYI by orv · · Score: 5, Informative

    From that changelog:

    "Please don't use knx-hdinstall any more!
    I won't support it any longer and its just there as uhm, its not my project, but those of Christian Perle.
    knoppix-installer should now work in both modes (see below) and give a fairly stable system. "

  10. Knoppix is a lifesaver/NTFS recovery by Lerxst+Pratt · · Score: 5, Informative

    Two days ago, I performed disaster recovery on a friend's Windows 2000 box. Suffice it to say that his computer would not boot into the recovery console nor would the hard drive allow me to reinstall Windows 2000 on it. Fortunately, I had a Debian Jr. Knoppix CD.

    I popped it in, booted up, and was ready to amaze my friend. Both his NTFS hard drive and his USB FAT32 hard drive appeared on the desktop automagically after boot. I set the USB drive to read/write by right-clicking and selecting the read/write mode. I opened both drives in two separate windows of Konqueror and performed the data recovery right before his eyes by dragging files from one drive to another.

    When the backup was complete, I showed him a few other things like the games and that he was completely internet capable. His jaw dropped in awe. He asked if I would make him a copy of the CD so that he could be internet functional on his computer until he could get a new hard drive. I told him to keep the CD. It was his very first experience with Linux... and a very positive one.

    I will reiterate one thing I have already read under this topic. No one should be without a Knoppix CD. Go find yourself a torrent or a mirror and get Knoppix now!!! You never know when it will save your a$$.