Installing Fedora Core 4 on the Mac mini
Tammy Fox writes "The Mac mini is all the rave. Discover how to install the soon-to-be-released Fedora Core 4 on this tiny desktop appliance, including new features in Fedora Core 4 to support the new hardware."
"Options for Bluetooth® and Airport® Extreme exist, however the latter will not work on Linux."
"the Mac mini supports three options: wired Ethernet, wireless Airport Extreme, and Bluetooth. Wired Ethernet gets automatically configured, either via DHCP or static IP, via the system-config-network tool. Airport Extreme, however, sports the Broadcom chipset, where open source drivers are non-existent at present (and there's no reason the believe that they will ever exist)."
How does the article leave this detail out?
The form factor itself is a major selling point. The thing is *tiny*.
Second, it is very low on power usage, similarly to G4 laptops (as it shares much of the architecture).
Thirdly -- obviously this goes away when you (only) put Linux on it -- it's the cheapest available machine that runs OS X.
Generally, you'll have a hard time finding a competitive machine at this price with similar dimensions.
FYI I run Ubuntu on a Clamshell iBook and it recognized and configured the airportcard automatically during install.
;) if you are happy running obsolete hardware, that is.
So your double use of 'any Mac,''any built-in wireless hardware,' is a bit errr... FUDdy
OTOH, Airport Extreme does indeed not work, so be warned.
1. AIO (I don't know about Tiger, but Panther only does AIO on file-based FDs, not FDs based on pipes or sockets -- if you don't believe me, check out the XNU kernel source and see for yourself by grepping for ESPIPE) -- some apps need this ability.
2. The Linux toolchain is the same on PPC and x86. ld is ld is ld, gcc is gcc is gcc, elf is elf. Plus, Linux works on embedded devices (which is one nice thing about the Mac mini -- it's a cheap PPC embedded development platform) while OSX does not yet.
Regards,
John
Falling You - beautiful