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Linux From Scratch 5.0 Book Released

Mecha-A writes "Linux From Scratch 5.0 was released earlier this month, incorporating GRUB as a bootloader, GNU coreutils, GCC 3.3, and lots of other package upgrades among other improvements. If you haven't tried it, LFS is a procedural outline for building a Linux system from the ground up. For those who can't get enough customizability..."

2 of 32 comments (clear)

  1. Linux from scratch by termos · · Score: 2, Funny

    I've always wanted to learn how Linux was written, FROM SCRATCH!

    I hope there will be book about GNU/Linux from scratch soon.

    (awaits the flame about old smelling men with beards, and so on)

    --
    Note to self: get smarter troll to guard door.
  2. I wish I had used this for my first Linux install by scumbucket · · Score: 0, Funny

    About two weeks ago I decided to try and install Linux on my old K6-2 450mhz machine gathering dust in the basement.
    A friend of mine gave me a few cd's that had something called 'Mandrake' on it.

    He said "This is supposed to be the most user-friendly 'distro' out there. Give it a try."

    So with trepidation about wiping out my beloved win98se install on the old machine, I jumped right in.

    On firing up the install disk, the Man-drake installer asked me if I wanted to remove the win98se partition
    that already existed. After pondering this for several minutes I though, 'what the hell, I can always
    reinstall it!' So I let it fly.

    After what seemed like 45 minutes of swapping cd's in-and-out of the drive, the man-drake (isn't that some sort of bird?)
    installer ask me what I wanted to use this linux machine for. So many choices! games, office, mail server,
    web server, about 2 dozen choices flooded my screen. This is madness! So after carefully considerating my options
    I decided to choose them all! I would be a Linux power-user to end all linux power-users!

    So after this decision was made I waited. And waited. And waited. During this I started to wonder. My Windows XP
    Home intallation on my other Peecee didn't ask me thse kind of questions, and it easily has the all the abilities
    that man-drake advertised to have. After all, I paid for WinXP Home. Sigh, I guess this it the price one pays
    for being part of the linux elite.

    Approximately 50 mintues later I get another prompt from the man-drake installer asking me what kind of GUI I wanted
    to use, KDE or GNOME. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice shame on me! I selected both and let it fly.

    After only about 20 mintues this time it appeared the install was completed. The mandrake installer told me it
    was going to reboot and then I would revel in Linux goodness. I waited with baited breath while the reboot
    churned away, eagerly waiting the opportuntity to use the KDE/GNOME interface. Page after page of command line
    stuff flew by my screen, seeming to get faster and faster as the time of my linux deliverance approached. Then,
    the screen flashed black (kinda like those scenes from the movie Wargames). I gasped and was presented with
    something like this:

    bsh: blah/blah/blah/ ____

    What the hell was this? Wasn't this man-drake linux supposed to be user friendly? Instead of the friendly
    confines of a WinXP like GUI instead I was given an ugly DOS like prompt, which looked supiciously like
    the TRS-80 system I first learned BASIC on in high school. Is this all the farther the great open-source
    movement has progressed?

    After serveral minutes of sobbing and knashing of teeth, I came to a decision. All the linux fags out there
    were not going to defeat me! They were not going to cry "Bend over WinXP boy, you're going to take linux OUR
    WAY and like it!".

    I quickly found my old musty copy of 'Unix in a Nutshell' from my college days and got to work. In a few hours
    I found out how to start the KDE GUI. This made life so much easier. After several days I was able to get the
    machine's 14.4 internal modem working with man-drake and connected to the internet, using a browser called
    Mozilla. Where oh where were the glorious pop-ups that appeared as I was surfing porn sites? Those bastards!

    After several more days I was starting to feel somewhat comfortable. Using something called Gimp to manipulate
    my growing collection of adult images was becoming a habit. And because I was ashamed to let my friends and
    neighbors know I was using a gasp! free operating system like mandrake, I kept the pee-cee in the basement. Now
    my girlfriend things the sounds emanating from below are me just woodworking or lifting weights. I guess linux has
    freed me after all!

    --
    CMDRTACO CHECK YOUR EMAIL!