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MandrakeMove Final Available for Download

hendridm writes "According to the Mandrake Linux web page, 'MandrakeMove is available for download - Everything for Office, Multimedia and Internet on a single live CD: the final version of MandrakeMove Download Edition is now publicly available for download. Make your Windows-friends discover how powerful and friendly Mandrake Linux is: this couldn't be easier than with MandrakeMove!' Go team." (We mentioned this version of Mandrake before; of course, if you download, you don't get a memory key with the deal ;))

13 of 291 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What's with the name? by driftingAimfully · · Score: 5, Informative

    It runs from a CD. It moves around with you.

  2. Re:What's with the name? by Drakin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Move, mobile. One live CD (as in, no installation, boot and run from the CD). Can also be used as a harmless intro to linux for windows users, without altering thier computer, or a lengthy install.

  3. The torrent... by corebreech · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...has been available for some time now.

    (I wonder how that happened?)

    1. Re:The torrent... by laurens · · Score: 4, Informative

      Or try this one: Torrent from Mandrakes site.

      There seems to be no link to it from Mdks site, but the search finds it. Unfortunately, this means that only 54% is seeded ATM.

  4. Re:USB Key by DrunkenTerror · · Score: 4, Informative

    We went through all these questions last month. You can use your own key, or none at all. Jeezus.

  5. Re:USB Key by ChiaKemp · · Score: 5, Informative

    I played with one of the pre-release versions of this and it'd mount the key (commonly called a USB thumb or pen drive), and seemed to offer a option durring boot to read configuration from the key. So I don't see why the download final version wouldn't do it.

  6. Re:USB Key by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have used the 'member verison' with my own USB key (Sandisk adapter to SD card of 128 Mbyte) for a week or two now.

    Works Ok but not perfect, first three install attemts destroyed the SD card's formatting, after having removed a USB printer (and reformatting the card), everything works fine.

    Last week I visited a company without my laptop, and booted a PC (that Windows PC's person was on vacation) and could give a quick introduction to Eclipse which was running from the USB key and the Eclipse plugin I've written for them.

    Works very nice, I'll definitely bring it with me the next time I'll go visit a company for demonstration purposes. (Still I'll bring my laptop as backup since it is not that robust every time at boot or shutdown...)

    Have tried it on 5 completely different computers and the only one which did not work was a new Dell laptop with this broad display. It booted Ok, but then the display whent black... Works ok on my Asus laptop though...

    It's perfect if your going to visit someone and need to lookup something on the net/have an hour to spare and aren't really allowed to use an account on a Win machine or know the login. /Hedex

  7. Re:Great news! by mkro · · Score: 4, Informative

    I moved from Redhat 8 (half a year), to SuSE 8.2 (three months) to Mandrake 9.2 DL Edition, which I've been quite happy with for the last month. Both SuSE and MDK are excellent to install and maintain, but SuSE started behaving a bit strange on me after a while (Scanning for new hardware on boot locked up, some random system freezes I never could find an answer to, etc). Could've been just me, but after using 10 minutes to replace SuSE with Mandrake, I was in love. (Click to select Norwegian keyboard, click to keep /home, click to keep Win2k partition, next, next, next, FINISHED!)

    Only worries with MDK: Kernel source was not included on CDs, and I have not been able to stop urpmi from complaining about that "contrib" uses an invalid list file.

    Apart from that, two thumbs up.

    --
    I shall go and tell the indestructible man that someone plans to murder him.
  8. Re:I really like the idea of these liveCD things.. by dot-magnon · · Score: 5, Informative

    NTFS is generally kernel stuff. Writing is, at least in 2.4, NOT recommended. The Linux-NTFS people say that the risk of failure is.. big.

    But for 2.6 kernels, there's another world. The "new" NTFS drivers are better, and reads perfectly well. Quoting the Linux-NTFS website: The new driver, introduced in 2.5.11, has some write code, but it's very limited. The driver can overwrite existing files, but it cannot change the length, add new or delete existing files.

    All in all, NTFS isn't reliable except for reading in 2.6 kernels. These NTFS drivers are in the kernel tree.

    A good FAQ is at this place

    FAT sucks, but works brilliantly for almost nothing. Like temp files.

    If you're lucky, the Mandrake folks gave you the availability to write temp files to the USB key (boxed Mandrake Move). I don't know, though.

  9. Re:Which kernel? by Sandb · · Score: 4, Informative

    From what i read on the website, it is basically the same as Mandrake 9.2, which has kernel 2.4.22 and Linux 2.6.0pre kernel provided in contribs.

    Since this is a static cd-rom system, i think it is safe to say the kernel will be 2.4.22 and NOT 2.6.

    I think this is a good thing, 2.6 is out only fairly recently, while 2.4.22 has proven itself to be extremely stable. Once you have burned the cd, its kinda hard to install an update, so going for stability doesn't seem that weird to me.

  10. For the geeks out there! by Daath · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is a knoppix remastering called DamnSmallLinux - Designed to run on small CDs, but can be modified to boot from a USB key!
    The distro runs FluxBox as the WM, it has a browser, email client, word processor, file mananger, instant messenger, picture viewer, image editing, spreadsheet and a lot more :) Oh, yeah, and it's 50 MB! :) How's that for light and portable?

    --
    Any technology distinguishable from magic, is insufficiently advanced.
  11. Re:Great news! by SmilingBoy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, I had these problems with the invalid file list as well. They disappeared after choosing a different mirror. Don't know why though. Configure your mirrors for urpmi here: http://plf.zarb.org/~nanardon/

  12. Re:Great news! by blixel · · Score: 4, Informative

    I am extremely happy with Mandrake 9.2. Except some minor sound problems everything else worked out of the box

    I agree. I waited for the Mandrake 9.2 ISO's to become publically available before I decided to check out Mandrake 9.2. I installed it on my wife's computer and after about a week, I was "sold". I ordered the Power Pack DVD from MandrakeStore.com and have been very happy with my purchase.

    I installed it on my machine on another hard-drive (was using Fedora Core 1 prior) and once I got all my data copied over from Fedora, I was using Mandrake exclusively there on out. I kept my Fedora install around for 2 or 3 weeks (just in case) but I finally ended up formatting that drive a few days ago so I could use the space for storage. On this machine (and only this machine) the default kernels seem to have something included that causes my computer to hard lock after a seemingly random amount of time. This would definitely be a show stopper for a newbie. But I prefer to compile my own kernel anwyway (and with the announcement of the memory bug in the pre 2.4.24 kernels), compiling your own kernel becomes a really good idea. My custom kernel has been perfectly stable.

    I'm able to do everything I want to do with a computer. My current browser of choice is Galeon, though there is a lot to like about Mozilla Firebird. But Galeon has better Gnome integration in my opinion.

    Gaim does all I need it to do for Instant Messaging.

    I generally prefer the likes of light-weight players like XMMS for basic music listening, but lately (uhh..basically starting today) I'm really starting to appreciate RhythmBox. It just makes it real easy to find and sort songs instead of going through the directory hierarchy with your file manager. Now if RhythmBox would just get some integration with various portable digital music players (iPod for me - but I'd like to see plugins for as many as possible), that would be truly great. GTKpod works for syncing with iPod, but I don't like maintaining two completely different music databases. I'm really starting to like the rating system. So simple, but so useful.

    Evolution is just more than I need in an e-mail client so I have been using Thunderbird. I'm happy with it, it works. But I think it could be improved (and I'm sure it will be, it's only version 0.4).

    I'm finding that Gimp is kind of hard to get use to. It's kind of awkward in my opinion but I am learning more about it all the time. Like Photoshop though, it's just way more than I need. I'd like to find a high quality, good looking Gnome/GTK Image Editor that can do all of the basic things like resizing, cropping, rotation, etc...

    I've been using Open Office for a while and I'm pretty happy with it. But I'd like to see better API? integration. (Not sure if API is the right term.) But basically where OO fits in better with the Gnome HIG. OO just looks really out of place on my system. But it works, and works well and that's the most important thing to me. I'm confident the aesthetics will catch up eventually.

    Between Totem and GXine, I'm able to view every video file format I've ran into. And the playback is perfectly smooth. I use to have a real issue with video playback under Linux.

    I also installed my Mandrake 9.2 DVD on my Laptop (Sony Vaio PCG-FX140) and have been very happy with it. The only problem I've had on the laptop has been with the power management stuff not working. For some people that would probably be a show stopper but for my uses it isn't really an issue. And I could probably resolve it if I took the time to figure it out. All of my hardware works "out of the box". (The onboard modem may or may not work. I'm not sure, I've never used it whether using Linux or Windows.)

    I still have the download version on my wife's machine and she has been using it without any complaints ever since I installed it. She surfs the web (Galeon), checks her e-mail (Thunderbird), enjoys all the little dumb games that come w