News and Editorials
A new version of
Linspire (formerly
LindowsOS) was
released
last week. Unlike the previous versions, which were being produced and
marketed at a furious pace, the Linspire developers and beta testers took
their time with version 5.0 - it came out exactly 15 months after the
distribution's previous stable release - Linspire 4.5. This would indicate
that the company's strategy has undergone some changes - there seems to be
less emphasis on marketing and hype, and more focus on true usability and
feature enhancements to make the product accessible to non-technical users.
And indeed, Linspire 5.0 is an excellent, user-friendly distribution with
many new features and intriguing enhancements.
The release is available for instant purchase and download from Linspire's
online store for $49.95.
Current active members of the $5/month Click-N-Run (CNR) application
warehouse can get it free of charge - either from one of the company's
FTP/HTTP servers, or via BitTorrent. Interestingly, the CD image serves
both as an installation medium and a live CD, and users have an opportunity
to choose one or the other from the initial GRUB boot menu. GRUB makes its
first appearance in Linspire 5.0 and it gives an early indication that the
distribution now comes with a brand new installer - a more powerful one
than any of the installers in previous versions. Naturally, the
ultra-simple "take over the hard disk" installation method is still
available, but the "advanced" installation option now lives up to its name;
it not only allows users to choose a hard disk partition to install
Linspire on, it also gives a choice between ReiserFS (default) and Reiser4
(experimental) file systems. Various boot options can also be configured
here. Once done, the installer will simply copy the files from the CD onto
the hard disk before prompting the user to reboot the system.
After rebooting we found ourselves looking at a long GRUB menu listing
several operating systems (the installer is capable of detecting and
setting up other installed operating systems, both Windows and Linux), as
well as two other menu items: "Redetect" and "Diagnostics". The former is
useful in case a new piece of hardware has been added to the computer,
while the latter allows users to boot into a single-user mode for any
troubleshooting, and even provides a diagnostics output that can be
forwarded to the Linspire support personnel. The default option will boot
into "ldm", a graphical login screen with entries for "Administrator", as
well as any available user accounts. The only desktop on the Linspire 5.0
installation CD is a heavily beautified and customized KDE 3.3.2.
But underneath the pretty user interface it is still Linux (or Debian
GNU/Linux, to be more precise), so what exactly differentiates Linspire from
other major Linux distributions on the market? As one would expect from a
beginner-friendly operating system, Linspire comes with some exciting
usability enhancements. The "Linspire Web Suite" is one of the applications
with added functionality compared to the stock Mozilla browser; these
include a check-as-you-type spell-checking application (with suggested
replacement words), as well as "Hot Words". Hot Words is an interesting
technology that auto-highlights words on a web page and brings up a
customizable context menu with quick links to search, news, dictionary,
thesaurus and other relevant web sites. This feature is turned off by
default, but once you get used to the concept, you might find that web
browsing is suddenly an altogether different and more pleasant experience.
Disappointingly, this feature is not available in Firefox or Konqueror.
Linspire has been developing its own set of applications to overcome some
obvious difficulties in adoption of Linux on the desktop. The range of
these L* applications now includes Lphoto, Lsongs, Lassist and LTorrent,
complemented by a web authoring application called Nvu. Some of these have
been nicely integrated into Linspire - as an example, Lphoto detects a
digital camera storage device in the USB port and offers to import all
images into the application. It also provides the ability to organize
images into virtual photo albums, launch a slide show, or email images.
Lsongs is a media player and a budding competition to iTunes, with options
to buy MP3 music files from MP3tunes.com - a new business venture launched
recently by Linspire's founder Michael Robertson. Some of these
applications still need work before they mature, but as a general rule,
they are easy-to-use and add to the overall desktop usability of Linspire.
As far as Linspire's view of computer security is concerned, not much has
changed since earlier releases, and the default state is still "run as
passwordless root". That said, a superuser password can be optionally
entered during installation and new user accounts can be created from a
configuration screen, right after the first boot. I had a lengthy email
exchange about these issues with Linspire's president Kevin Carmony. He
insisted that enforcement of passwords and user accounts is an annoying and
inconvenient "hoop", similar to enforcing strict airport security or
placing 12 extra locks on one's house. More interestingly, he also
disclosed that Linspire was sponsoring work "at the file system level
that will make the OS more secure than it has ever been before, and all
without expecting grandma to jump through complicated hoops." And
while on the subject of security, it is worth noting that encryption of
users' home directories, a concept so nicely implemented in Xandros Desktop
OS 3, is not available in Linspire 5.0.
There are many other small ideas that make Linspire 5.0 a truly great
operating system for non-technical users. A set of Flash-based audio-visual
tutorials guide new users through the very basics of computer usage. File
extensions have been properly associated with default applications. Flash,
Java, and media playback support are integrated into the default browser.
Supermount for removable devices works reliably. The hardware detection and
configuration is quite possibly the best in the industry - now also with
support for wireless networking, 802.11g, and WiFi profiles. The CNR
warehouse, with thousands of Debian packages available at a click of a
mouse, nicely compliments the entire package. Even experienced Linux users
would surely appreciate all these conveniences that greatly contribute
towards more productive use of their computers.
Overall, Linspire gets a top mark for their effort at bringing Linux to the
masses. Their latest release is not the fastest operating system on earth,
but it is beautiful, well-designed, has excellent hardware support, and
many small improvements that make computers so much more fun. Highly
recommended - not only to grandmas, but also to users who value their time.
Comments (1 posted)
New Releases
The Kubuntu team has announced the preview of their first release. Kubuntu
is a new distribution using Ubuntu and the KDE 3.4 desktop. This release
follows the preview release last week of Ubuntu 5.04. The final release of
Kubuntu 5.04 will be on April 6th. The preview release includes both
install CDs and bootable Live CDs for three architectures.
Full Story (comments: 8)
Distribution News
Mandrakesoft has sent out an announcement detailing a few changes in how the
Mandrakelinux distribution will be produced. The company is moving to an
annual release cycle; the next scheduled Mandrakelinux release will be
"Mandrakelinux 2006," due in the (northern hemisphere) fall. The company
plans to have merged all the good stuff from Conectiva by then. There will
also be one "transitional" release ("Mandrakelinux Limited Edition 2005")
in a few months.
Full Story (comments: 4)
The
first call for votes for the Debian
Project Leader Election has gone out. All votes must be GPG signed (or PGP
signed) with your key that is in the Debian keyring and should not be
encrypted. A
transcript of
the debate is available as are the raw logs of the four channels
involved in the debates. The
platforms for the
candidates are also available. The
Vote Page is a good
place to find all the available information on this year's election.
Enrico Zini has announced the results of
the Survey on
Debian Usage. "The presentation pages provide some views on the
results, which I consider quite successful in giving various insights on
our community, as well as some interesting ideas to direct further
development."
Comments (none posted)
New versions of the GNOME 2.10.0 packages for Slackware
have been announced.
"
This is our 6th testing release of GNOME 2.10.0 packages for Slackware. The packages are stable. We wanted to annouce this release to get wider testing of the packages. So test them and send feedback. See the support section of the website for contact details."
Comments (none posted)
Distribution Newsletters
The Debian Weekly News for March 22, 2005 is out. This week's edition looks at the license of the Linux kernel (GPL v2) with speculation about what happens after GPL v3 is released, the third release candidate for the Debian-installer, the Creative Commons 2.0 Licenses, resurrecting old PCs with Debian, and more.
Full Story (comments: none)
The Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for the week of March 21, 2005 looks at additions to the documentation collection, difficulties with Acrobat Reader 7 for Linux, reasons for Gentoo/FreeBSD, a summary of PPC meeting, Xen, and several other topics.
Full Story (comments: 1)
The
DistroWatch
Weekly for March 21, 2005 is out. "
Two "newbie-friendly"
distribution releases appeared on the scene last week - one of them a very
nicely designed product with superb usability and great, innovative
features (Linspire 5.0), while the other is a promising new product, which
is let down by a poor installer, obvious bugs and lack of polish (Ark Linux
2005.1). On the BSD front, a new initiative to create a BSD certification
programme is under way. Happy reading!"
Comments (none posted)
Minor distribution updates
Ark Linux has released
Ark
Linux 2005.1. "
Ark Linux 2005.1 is built around the latest
desktop technologies, including KDE 3.4, OpenOffice.org 1.1.4 (a preview of
2.0 is also available on the Ark Extra Software CD), glibc 2.3.4, X.Org
6.8.2, and kernel 2.6.11." (Found on
KDE.News)
Comments (none posted)
Devil-Linux v1.2.4 has been
released. "
The changes include a critical security fix for PAX,
fixes for serial console support, various program updates and a few new
Perl modules."
Full Story (comments: none)
Pingwinek
GNU/Linux has released the first preview of version 1.0 in a live CD
with GNOME 2.10. (Found on
GnomeDesktop)
Comments (none posted)
Gnome Desktop
covers a live
CD in Chinese with GNOME. "
Base on Ubuntu Live CD to customize
for Chinese is ready for download. This CD is especial suitable for
Tradition Chinese user, and also Simpified Chinese user."
Comments (none posted)
Package updates
Fedora Core 3 updates:
libgal2-2.2.5-1 (bug
fixes and updated translations),
libsoup-2.2.2-1.FC3 (upgrade with bug fixes),
evolution-data-server-1.0.4-3 (numerous bug
fixes),
evolution-2.0.4-1 (numerous bug
fixes),
evolution-connector-2.0.4-1
(numerous bug fixes),
selinux-policy-targeted-1.17.30-2.89 (backport
rawhide changes, bug fixes),
policycoreutils-1.18.1-2.10 (updates),
gimp-2.2.4-0.fc3.3 (fixes some barfing and
crashing),
procps-3.2.3-5.2 (bug fixes),
lsof-4.72-2.1 (src.rpm cleanup),
lockdev-1.0.1-4.1 (fix lockdev errors),
boost-1.32.0-5.fc3 (bug fixes).
Comments (none posted)
Mandrakelinux has fixed several bugs in KDE for ML 10.1. Click below for
the gory details.
Full Story (comments: none)
Trustix has fixed bugs in cpplus, setup and squid for TSL 2.2. Click below
for gory details.
Full Story (comments: none)
Newsletters and articles of interest
NewsForge
explores
M0n0wall, a FreeBSD based firewall. "
M0n0wall has a nice Web
interface for configuring firewall settings. Most of the configuration can
be done via the Web interface and all the values are stored in a single XML
file. The configuration can be saved on a diskette, hard disk, or external
storage card. This makes it easy to deploy several firewalls with a similar
hardware setup."
Comments (none posted)
Distribution reviews
Linux Journal
takes a
look at Novell Linux Desktop 9. "
Novell has a long history of
providing support, training, back-office functionality, innovation in
managing desktops and networks and a significant partner ecosystem. Since
the company embraced the open-source model with the purchase of SUSE and
Ximian, it has transformed the open-source model into one of
maturity."
Comments (none posted)
OSNews
reviews Arch
Linux. "
Arch is an i686-optimized Linux distributions based upon
the ideas of CRUX and Slackware. It incorporates their stability, speed and
most of all, their keep-it-simple philosophy. When Judd Vinet started Arch
towards the end of 2001 he did it because he needed n operating system that
resembled CRUX or Slackware but with a package manager that had the ability
to track dependencies. So he sat down, used LFS to put together his distro
and wrote 'pacman' from scratch, his minimalistic and yet very usable,
package manager."
Comments (none posted)
Novell's Cool Solution
reviews
the current beta of SUSE Linux 9.3. "
All the buzz about the release
of SUSE 9.3 Professional got me excited. This very morning, I downloaded
and installed SUSE Linux 9.3 Professional beta 4. The installation is
similar to 9.2 though the screens seem crisper. It has definitely had some
work, as it will do an md5sum check on the installation media to make sure
it's not been corrupted. Also, when Grub was installed, it recognized the
other bootable partitions. It put these partitions into the Grub menu
automatically. It did not do this in previous versions. That's all I'm
going to mention about the installation. Instead, let's take a look at some
of the changes you'll in the newest version of SUSE when you are actually
using it."
Comments (none posted)
Here's a quick look
at
Gentoo, on NewsForge. "
What separates Gentoo from other
GNU/Linux distributions? It isn't really a distribution. It's more of a
meta-distribution, a collection of tools that manage the "from scratch"
approach. It doesn't have any packages per se, just ebuilds that describe
where the source packages can be downloaded, and how to include your
specified compilation preferences in the process."
Comments (none posted)
Techworld
takes a
look at Linspire Five-0. "
Linspire, the company once known as
Lindows, has released its latest Linux version, Linspire Five-0. More than
a year in the making and with more than 1,200 improvements, the company
reckons the new product "boasts enhancements in every core application and
provides the most secure, reliable and easy-to-use desktop Linux experience
available for home, business and school users.""
Comments (none posted)
Page editor: Rebecca Sobol
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