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Slackware 12.1 Released

SlackFan writes "Slackware 12.1 has been released, with kernel 2.6.24-5. 'Among the many program updates and distribution enhancements, you'll find better support for RAID, LVM, and cryptsetup; a network capable (FTP and HTTP, not only NFS) installer; and two of the most advanced desktop environments available today: Xfce 4.4.2, a fast, lightweight, and visually appealing desktop environment, and KDE 3.5.9, the latest 3.x version of the full-featured K Desktop Environment.'"

16 of 244 comments (clear)

  1. ok and? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    same stuff as in every other distro. the same "most advanced desktop environments available today" can be found in hundreds of other distros too. Why not advertise based on what makes slackware different from the rest than taunting the software that everyone else has?

    1. Re:ok and? by gambolt · · Score: 4, Funny

      Slackware isn't different from other distros. Other distros are different from slackware.

      slackware:linux::Rolling Stones:Rock&Roll

    2. Re:ok and? by Jurily · · Score: 4, Funny

      Cool ad. Is the "STAY AWAY!!!" logo on the booting screen too?

  2. Que pasa? Nada. by DarrenBaker · · Score: 4, Funny

    According to their home page, this is the first interesting thing to happen to Slackware since 2005. It's the most boringest of all distros!

    1. Re:Que pasa? Nada. by Pommpie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Which is why it works so boringly. No crashes, no wacky untested software with potentially unrealised bugs, no fancy memory-sapping 3D effects... where's the fun in that?

    2. Re:Que pasa? Nada. by zappepcs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To some it is boring, yet to others it's a sign that not only is Linux not going to go away, but it is available for any business, government institution, school, person etc. to modify and use it as they please. There is no single church around the globe despite the rather vigorous efforts of several groups. There should be no single OS. The simple reason for this is Born out by your comment. We simply cannot all play nice together and agree on what an OS is supposed to be and do. For that reason alone there should never be a single OS. Vive Slackware! Vive la difference.

      You never know, one day next year (around March 15th or so) you will find that you have the perfect application for the use of Slackware. All of a sudden, it will seem like a cool OS for that application and you will have a moment of de ja vu and silently thank me for this moment.

  3. Hooray for slack! by lambent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The first distro I ever installed, and the one that's changed the least over the years. You may say that is a bad thing, but Slack is the only distro i can think of that hasn't succumbed to bloat, rot, ego, or the all-things-to-all-people syndrome. It may have stagnated for a while, but it's good to see it get back to a more regular release schedule.

  4. Fix URL, please - s/org/com/ by robw810 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The official Slackware site is at slackware.COM, not slackware.ORG. (and it's already dead as of comment #3).

  5. Bittorrents ... by ClickOnThis · · Score: 4, Informative
    --
    If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
  6. Re:So tell me... by Nimey · · Score: 4, Informative

    Patrick (the maintainer) is a SubGenius.

    --
    Hail Eris, full of mischief...

    E pluribus sanguinem
  7. excellent question by goombah99 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What exactly does go into making a "distro" anyhow. My only experience with this is making my own custom Knoppix CDs that woke up as apache servers. Seemed pretty freakin easy. it was sort of a chinese menu of what you wanted to leave in and leave out.

    But of course I was standing on the shoulder's of giants. Someone created the look and feel of that and made all the config files work. But how much of that is what goes into a distro and how much is pretty much set by the packages them selves. e.g. choose gnome and is basically the look and feel set?

    these days everything seems like it comes down to four looks, KDE or gnome in user interface and redhatish or debianish in directory layout and packages.

    THe only distro I've played with that felt amazingly original in every aspect is Damn Small where everything is different and very tight. (never tried Puppy).

    So what exactly goes on to make a "distro". What makes say ubuntu different than one of the four chioices (kde,gnome, debian, redhat)

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:excellent question by notamisfit · · Score: 4, Informative

      Really, any distribution boils down to package selection, package management, and release engineering. As per your example, Ubuntu uses Debian unstable for packages and apt for management, but only supports a small subset of unstable, and releases every six months. Yeah, just about every GNOME and KDE distro looks the same (well, scratch that for KDE, considering how much Mandriva, SuSE, and Kubuntu patch it all to hell and think they're actually *improving* it). Slackware's more of a throwback to the days when a Linux distro was just an easy way to get a system up and running, as opposed to an all-inclusive software library.

      --
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  8. What makes Slackware different... by Tumbleweed · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's Slacktastic, and chock-full of Volkerdingliciousness! Slackware - part of a well-balanced breakfast.*

    * Notes: Not to be used as a flotation device. May stick to certain types of skin. Do not taunt Slackware.

  9. I thought this was news for nerds.... by Skylinux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    WTF is going on here? I have been reading through the comments and it appears as if most "nerds" have been pussy wiped by other distros and don't understand the point of actually knowing your OS.

    If you learn Slackware, you know Linux! Why is that you ask?
    Because Slackware does not come with a bunch of highly modified packages, Slackware is build using tested and known to be working code. Configuration and partition is done by hand. Slackware does not crash if setup properly, it is a perfect OS for any server or Desktop.... if you know what you are doing but it is not for you grandma. It is an Operating System for "real" nerds :)

    With all the bitching about lack of features in Slackware, it may be time for you "nerds" to go and load up Vista for the ultimate hand holding experience.

    You all remind me of that computer technician we have at work, he thinks he is the freaking king but knows nothing about computers. He fixes issues by running every GUI tool on his thumb drive and hoping that one of them sticks. When I ask him how he fixed it, he has no clue and says that "Tool xyz" fixed it. When I ask him to run "regedit" his eyes open wide and he starts to sweat.... cold sweat.
    Dude you are not a computer tech, geek, nerd, hacker .... whatever. Go home and learn something.... almost forgot, he is A+ certified, uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

    Same goes for Slackware, use it, learn it, know Linux or use openSuSE and stop the bitching.

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    1. Re:I thought this was news for nerds.... by Dusty101 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Although the parent post's a bit... overcaffeinated, he has a point: maintaining a Slackware box teaches a lot about Linux overall. As a stepping stone for those who find it "as user-friendly as a rattlesnake", might I suggest they try out VectorLinux ( http://vectorlinux.com/website2/ )? It's a Slackware-derived distro that's easier to get to grips with, & runs nice & quickly on old boxes (which is why I often use it). Not totally pure in terms of 'free' (as in speech), but rather usable.

  10. System Requirements by dotancohen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The slack site lists these as the system requirements:
            * 486 processor
            * 16MB RAM (32MB suggested)
            * 100-500 megabytes of hard disk space for a minimal and around 3.5GB for full install
            * 3.5" floppy drive

    Does one really need a floppy drive to install it? Of my two desktops and single laptop, none have a floppy drive anymore.

    --
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