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FreeBSD LiveCD 1.1 Ready For Download

An anonymous reader writes "It's my pleasure to announce FreeSBIE 1.1, a LiveCD based on FreeBSD 5.3-RELEASE. Some of the innovations since 1.0 include: A renewed series of scripts to support power users; An installer to let users install FreeSBIE 1.1 on their hard drives, thus having a powerful operating system such as FreeBSD, but with all the personalizations FreeSBIE 1.1 carries; and the presence of the best open source software, chosen and personalized, such as X.Org 6.7, XFCE 4.2RC1, Firefox 1.0 and Thunderbird 0.9.2. Moreover, many bugs were solved thanks also to the help of numerous beta testers which we are honoured to thank. For more information visit FreeSBIE.org"

13 of 106 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Fast torrent by nocomment · · Score: 3

    Easy torrent access here.

    --
    /* oops I accidentally made a comment, sorry */
    /* http://allyourbasearebelongto.us */
  2. Re:...FreeBSD Live... by vitalogy · · Score: 2

    I think not, especially with a mascot like this!

    http://www.xs4all.nl/~marcone/bsdversuslinux.html/

    --
    I know I was born and I know that I'll die, the in between is mine.
  3. Re:While live cd's are an interesting idea by KevinKnSC · · Score: 4, Informative

    LiveCDs are an easy way to "try out" an operating system without commiting to anything. You can pop one of these in the drive, play with a bit, and still have your regular operating system intact when you're done. The one I use the most, though, is the System Rescue CD. I used that with all of the Windows machines I unofficially support, and now whenever one of them goes bad I can stick that CD in and restore the drive image from the network in about 45 minutes. No more spending days getting everything reinstalled and tweaked just right.

  4. Requiem for the FUD by AgainstFUD · · Score: 5, Informative
    ... facts are facts. ;)

    FreeBSD:
    FreeBSD, Stealth-Growth Open Source Project (Jun 2004)
    "FreeBSD has dramatically increased its market penetration over the last year."
    Nearly 2.5 Million Active Sites running FreeBSD (Jun 2004)
    "[FreeBSD] has a secured a strong foothold with the hosting community and continues to grow, gaining over a million hostnames and half a million active sites since July 2003."
    What's New in the FreeBSD Network Stack (Sep 2004)
    "FreeBSD can now route 1Mpps on a 2.8GHz Xeon whilst Linux can't do much more than 100kpps."

    NetBSD:
    NetBSD sets Internet2 Land Speed World Record (May 2004)
    NetBSD again sets Internet2 Land Speed World Record (30 Sep 2004)

    OpenBSD:
    OpenBSD Widens Its Scope (Nov 2004)
    Review: OpenBSD 3.6 shows steady improvement (Nov 2004)

    *BSD in general:
    Deep study: The world's safest computing environment (Nov 2004)
    "The world's safest and most secure 24/7 online computing environment - operating system plus applications - is proving to be the Open Source platform of BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution) and the Mac OS X based on Darwin."
    ..and last but not least, we have the cutest mascot as well - undisputedly. ;)

    --
    Being able to read *other people's* source code is a nice thing, not a 'fundamental freedom'.

  5. Re:...FreeBSD Live... by brilinux · · Score: 2, Funny
    Since that 404s, with the "/" at the end:

    http://www.xs4all.nl/~marcone/bsdversuslinux.html

  6. Re:While live cd's are an interesting idea by ScaryTall · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I use mine when I'm working either with a machine having some sort of OS problem or an old machine I have no intention of using, but from which I need to recover some data. I can pop in the Live CD and boot to an always-working OS. From there I can either access/transfer my data or restore the disk image. It's not unlike the system restore boot disks that have come with systems for years. These are just more robust. I always have one in my desk or bag.

    It's also a great way to evaluate a new or updated OS without the danger of trashing my system, though that probably falls under the Completely Obvious category.

  7. The installer is the dragonfly installer... by CoolVibe · · Score: 5, Informative
    As seen on bsdinstaller.org, written by DragonFlyBSD developers.

    The article poster might at least have mentioned that, but here it is, in a comment.

    The DragonFly installer team really deserve kudos for this thing. Especially for making it so generic. I heard someone even made an OpenBSD installer from this. It really is that flexible and easy to muck with.

    The first revisions of this relied on CAPS, which is the new IPC framework in DragonFly. Later on, other ways of IPC were added (sockets etc.) which makes this possible. Also, kudos to GeekGod of livebsd.com for sending the patches to the FreeSBIE team.

    The cool thing about the bsdinstaller is that the interface is decoupled from the back end which does the actual partitioning/copying/etc. There is even a CGI front-end available. Do your installs from a web browser! :) Oh, and an X-based installer (both Qt and GTK) is in the works.

    1. Re:The installer is the dragonfly installer... by ulib · · Score: 3
      Thanks for the info, and Kudos to the DragonFly developers!

      DragonFly's a promising OS that often goes unnoticed because it's still in its infancy, but BSD users surely have great expectations about it - and when you're an OS that people don't know yet, a nice piece of software like this installer is surely a *very* good way of introducing yourself. :)
      --
      Being able to read *other people's* source code is a nice thing, not a 'fundamental freedom'.

  8. The bar is raised again for /stand/sysinstall by Crusty+Oldman · · Score: 2, Funny

    The bar is raised once again. And the writers of /stand/sysinstall will NEVER catch up.

    Not with ACME installation boosters strapped to their backs! Not with Vulcan mind-melds of Stephen Hawking channeling Alan Turing! Not with Bert Rutan sending them into space! Not with Anthony Schumacher delivering a laptop down the quarter mile in under four and a half seconds! Not with Bret Favre throwing them across the Gates of Hell. Not with...

    1. Re:The bar is raised again for /stand/sysinstall by sirket · · Score: 3, Insightful

      /stand/sysinstall may not have every bell and whistle in the world but damned if it doesn't do everything I need to and very quickly. I can go from sysinstall coming up to the OS starting to be installed with the options and partitioning I want in under 2 minutes. I haven't found another installer that comes close. I have a netboot image which installs a complete version of FreeBSD customized with the packages I want including partitioning and formatting in under 7 minutes from the time I boot the computer to the point at which it reboots and is ready for use.

      As for installation size, well- I am not sure what you are talking about. FreeBSD has a number of preset system types which include certain packages. I do minimal installs as a starting point for my own embedded work. Other times I do complete installs. Do I want apache installed as part of my base system? Ye gods no. I prefer to install just a few small packages on my system and do not want 34 hidden packages installed for every one I select in an installer. I would like to know exact version numbers and specific compile time options. You may not care. I do.

      As for the package problems- why is X part of the base system and yet installed as a package? Probably so that FreeBSD can move the whole base system into a series of packages to make it more modular. I don't know that for sure but it certainly makes sense.

      -sirket

  9. If *BSD is dying... by YU+Nicks+NE+Way · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...should it have a Live CD or a Terminally Ill CD?

  10. Roaming Users by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you roam around, you can borrow anyones pc and not effect what they are doing, and have your normal UNIX tools at hand.

    Also works great if you are in a windows shop and cant login to any PC in the area you are at.. just boot the CD and you instantly (normally) have network.. Not that the security people would approve.. But its their fault for leaving the machines 'boot from cdrom' active.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  11. Re:While live cd's are an interesting idea by someonehasmyname · · Score: 3, Informative

    of course it's mounted read only when you boot single user 'rescue' mode. you have to mount it read/write after: /sbin/mount -u /

    turning on swap is a good idea as well: /sbin/swapon -a

    then you can try mounting all the other partitions: /sbin/mount -a -t ufs

    --
    Common sense is not so common.