New Releases from CRUX, Yoper
CRUX www.crux.nu is the older of the two projects. Its development started in May 2000, although the first public release, version 0.5, was only made available in January 2001. Initially, updated versions were produced at a rapid pace, but recently the project has settled into a more reasonable release schedule of one new release every 4 - 6 months. CRUX is a free distribution developed and maintained by Per Lidén. The latest version comes with many package updates, inclusive of Kernel 2.4.21 and new additions of coreutils and GTK+.
Although CRUX is a Linux distribution developed from scratch and not based on
any other distribution, its development was almost certainly influenced by
Slackware Linux. This is apparent from its simplicity, use of BSD-style init
scripts and simple tar.gz-based package management with no resolution of
dependencies. However, CRUX departs from Slackware in two major areas - first
one is its i686 optimization, while the second one lies in the choice of CRUX
packages, especially the notable absence of KDE and GNOME desktop
environments and their libraries. Per Lidén: "
This approach has won CRUX many followers who prefer the simplicity and low
resource requirements of less powerful desktop environments over the
perceived bloat of both GNOME and KDE. The project's mailing lists are fairly busy and
several community web sites, including a CRUX Wiki, CRUX Community and a collection of
contributed CRUX Ports
have been set up by the fans of the distribution. Compared to many other
one-man projects, CRUX does have decent documentation in the form of the CRUX Handbook.
An older interview
with Per Lidén by OSNews is another good source of information about the
project's objectives.
Yoper www.yoper.com is a much
younger distribution; its first public development release was announced in
December 2002 and the first stable version - Yoper Ydesktop 1.0 was released
in March this year. The distribution is developed by Andreas Girardet and his
company, Yoper Limited. The author was interviewed
by DesktopLinux.com earlier this year and this is Andreas Girardet's reply to
a question about unique features of Yoper: "
Yoper's first official release was marred by a controversy
over what some members of the Linux community perceived as a flashy announcement, high cost of
the product and removal of older forum posts, all of which provoked heated
exchanges on the Yoper forum. However, as of early last month, Yoper Ydesktop
has been stripped of its commercial status and was turned into a
community project with users now contributing to the development of the
distribution. Yoper's latest release is available for download at no charge.
Yoper Ydesktop 1.1 comes with several interesting features. One of them is
support for Gentoo's Portage technology, which has been integrated into
Yoper, but other notable improvements include support for Kerberos and an
experimental update function for users of the previous release. GNOME 2.2 and
Evolution 1.4 are now available on the second CD, which also serves as
bootable live CD based on Knoppix. Yoper Ydesktop has been optimized for
speed and many users have reported increased responsiveness of Yoper's KDE,
OpenOffice and other large applications. On the negative side, Yoper's web
site is rather bare and it lacks detailed information about the product's
features as well as any solid documentation. It will be interesting to see
how the project evolves now that the product has been freed of its commercial
burden, or indeed, whether it survives in the long run.
In conclusion, the well-established CRUX distribution will appeal to those who
seek a lean and fast desktop/development Linux system based around
WindowMaker, while the newer Yoper Ydesktop will please those users who
prefer a highly optimized and full-featured KDE-centric Linux distribution.
Both CRUX 1.2 and Yoper Ydesktop 1.1 are available for free download from
their respective mirror sites.I have no plans to
extend the current package collection that much since I believe the most
important things are there already. Things you can live without, e.g. GNOME,
KDE, linuxconf, etc, are never going to be included in CRUX.
WindowMaker is the only available window manager.
We are a high-performance
OS -- optimized for 686 and higher. We are not a general purpose
distribution, but a compact OS with ability to use packages from all other
major OS's with support for 'rpm', 'tgz-native', and 'deb' integrated. The
binaries we distribute are built from scratch using the latest original
'vanilla' sources. We use the best features from other operating systems and
keep installation time to under 10 minutes.
"
