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Point-and-klik Linux Software Installation?

bfree writes "While you may have come across klik before, you might not be aware of some of the major changes which have been taking place over the last few months. If you visit the old klik site you will see a link to the Next Generation klik, which aims to provide a web interface to install the entire collection of Debian packages, letting you grab any package from sid (and its dependencies) and 'install' it into its own location, similar to the system outlined in this recent slashdot story." See below for more on klik.

bfree continues: This is not the only change in klik recently however, now applications are built into compressed image (cmg) files rather then stored as application directories. This means that you can store the application on any filesystem and move it around at will. Klik no longer totally depends on kde. Where previously klik could only be used with konqueror, now you can also use firefox and elinks, and where previously kdialog was required, now any of dialog|Xdialog|kdialog should work.

Klik now also supports more distributions fully. The officially supported list of distributions is now Knoppix (3.7), Kanotix (BHX), Linspire 5.0 and Simply Mepis (2004.04). Klik assumes that you will have installed at least the lowest version of any package which is present in all supported distributions and build the applications as such. If a package you want klik to install depends on a package in this base system it will not be included in the cmg so you must have it installed or add it to the cmg by hand afterwards. If you want to try using klik on another distribution, your results will primarily depend on whether or not your distribution has the packages the cmg depends on and assumes are present. So you will certainly fail to install kde applications on a distribution with no kde (as all the supported distributions have kde), but programs with simpler, or less common and therefore missing from some supported distributions, dependencies can work just fine.

One of the best ways to demonstrate the power of klik's techiniques is with the Christmas present from probono, an OpenOffice.org cmg for version 1.9.65. With this cmg (which runs on far more distributions then klik's supported list, especially as it uses Linux transparent iso compression rather then cramfs) you can download one 100M file to try out the preview release of Ooo, no need to upgrade any parts of your system and if the system has been setup by root to use cmg files there is also no need to even be root. I think this demonstrates the very best feature of bundled applications, you can try a potentially reckless preview release of software without having to upgrade your system.

4 of 212 comments (clear)

  1. Re:This Is What I Get At The Site Using Windows Op by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 0, Troll


    Of course, you never want to tell a site you're using Opera - then they pop up some crap telling you to use IE!

    It's bullshit either way.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  2. Re:User Agent String by Taladar · · Score: 0, Troll

    That is because they are KDE people: Mimicing MS's behaviour is their job...

  3. Re:This Is What I Get At The Site Using Windows Op by themightythor · · Score: 0, Troll

    What did you expect? It's a system for installing Linux software. You ran it on a non-Linux operating system...which is therefore unsupported. Jebus...

  4. Re:This Is What I Get At The Site Using Windows Op by strider44 · · Score: 0, Troll

    So you're complaining that the site won't display properly to people who can't use it anyway? It only gives an overview of the product and a location to download it should you want to . . . and that's bad?

    This is a piece of software for linux that can only be used on linux. I don't see why not being able to view the software on Windows is a problem.