What Live CDs Do You Carry Around?
TPC asks: "I recently acquired a small CD case that fits 12 CDs. I figured that it would be useful to always carry around a few CDs to use when helping others with computer issues, or in case something goes wrong with my own computer. However, I'm having a hard time deciding what CDs to pick, and there are probably many hidden gems out there. I'm sure I'm not the first person with this idea, so I ask you: What 12 live (and otherwise) CDs would you carry around?"
For me my number 1 disc is Knoppix or Wikipedia Article
After that's its a disc with common hardware drivers, Java 1.5, Eclipse, Apache, MySql and PHP
All the worlds indeed a
I'll second that one. Every once in awhile when the CEO loses his post-it note with his new password on it, it pays to be able to reset it quickly and painlessly. I have been using that disc for a couple of years and I love it.
I usually keep a copy of the UBCD around to test out SMART failures, flaky memory, etc. and fix boot problems and other miscellaneous junk.
Apart from those, I also have to give the nod to Knoppix or the STD Knoppix for other types of recovery.
I carry a bootable 1gb USB drive
I do not carry diagnostics on a USB flash drive. In an instant they can be silently corrupted without you knowing. They don't have a write protect. That alone makes them unusable to carry from client to client. You need idiot proof diagnostic media so an accidental reboot does not permit the worm on a system from hitching a ride with you to your next client. I only permit write protected media for all my diagnostics. A floppy with the write tab punched out or glued open, a single closed session CDR, or DVD is OK, but a writable USB drive is not OK to use by service people at my site.
The truth shall set you free!
I have a couple lying around, but the one I always pull out is grml. It's focused on text tools --"linux for sysadmins" I think is the phrase they use. It's booted on everything I ever tried it on and has good support for wireless cards. Plus they can fit a lot more on a cd by skipping KDE, and it boots so much faster than knoppix.
No, I'm not retarded.
DBAN is crucial. I carry one everywhere to make sure that retired machines and hard drives don't tell their secrets to the world..
Viper is the preferred editor of the Emacs operating system.
AC, if that were true, wouldn't Microsoft then be the one handing out free Ubuntu CDs?
Oh You POS