News and Editorials
A "Community" edition of Mandrakelinux* 10.0 was
released
late last week, first to members of the MandrakeClub and later also to public
FTP servers and mirrors. Some critics will argue that, according to the
recently announced
development
model, the "Community" edition is nothing but an extension of the
distribution's beta program on the road to Mandrake Linux "Official", to be
released some 2 - 3 months later. Nevertheless, the differences between the
"Community" and the "Official" editions are limited to bug fixes and security
updates, rather than new features or major software upgrades. As such, it is
worth taking a look at the new Mandrake release, especially since it is the
first major Linux distribution shipping with kernel 2.6 and KDE 3.2.
Perhaps the most noticeable new feature of Mandrakelinux 10.0 is speed:
"The speed of the KDE 3.2 and the new kernel is awesome, compared with
my Mandrake 9.2, you can feel it everywhere. Konqueror is cleaner and faster
than ever. All the interface interaction is more satisfying using the same
hardware," writes Luis Alves
in one of the first reviews of Mandrakelinux 10.0. Indeed, the responsiveness
of the KDE desktop is impressive, achieved not only by including the latest
kernel and KDE, but also a pre-release version of glibc 2.3.3 with Native
POSIX Threads Library (NPTL) for optimum threading performance. Compared to
Mandrake 9.2, or indeed to any other current distribution, this is one of the
most pleasant surprises found in Mandrakelinux 10.0.
There is a lot to like about KDE 3.2 in general, and Mandrake's own
customizations compliment the excellent desktop. The main menu, consistent
across all desktop environments, has been simplified with only 5 entries:
"Office", "Internet", "Multimedia", "System", as well as a "More
Applications" entry with further sub-menus. One of the new packages in the
latest KDE is KDE Wallet Manager, a system tray utility that stores and
manages user names and passwords throughout all KDE applications. Both KDE
and GNOME, the two main desktop environments, share a unified theme called
"Mandrakegalaxy II". The desktop experience is further enhanced by
"MagicDev", a new tool seamlessly combining automount with application
launcher based on the content of the inserted CD or DVD. For IBM ThinkPad
users, Mandrake provides several packages that make use of the special keys
found on the ThinkPad notebooks. All these enhancements make for a very
pleasant desktop experience.
The Mandrake Control Center has been redesigned. The changes won't please
everybody - the interface has changed from what used to resemble KDE Control
Center with a navigation pane on the left, to a browser-like interface with
previous/next buttons as the only way to navigate around the application. New
tools include the "DrakConnect" wizard for managing all types of Internet
connections in one central location, and "Mandrakeonline", a security
advisory and update notification service, similar to Fedora's up2date
(requires online registration).
While Mandrakelinux is often perceived as a distribution with a desktop focus,
it can function as a server just as well. Thanks to the inclusion of the new
kernel, the system is now a lot more scalable with support for over 4 billion
(!) unique users and groups (will anybody ever need to create user accounts
for two thirds of the world's population?), with up to 1 billion concurrent
processes. Those wishing to deploy Mandrakelinux 10.0 into mixed networks
should benefit from features in the new Samba 3.0 as well as read/write
support for NTFS file systems. The usual exhaustive range of server
applications is all there, including a mechanism for a smooth upgrade from
Apache 1.3 to Apache 2.0.
A distribution shipping on 4 - 5 CDs cannot possibly be without bugs and
Mandrakelinux 10.0 is no exception. Some users reported problems with the
detection and module loading of USB mice and keyboards, while others have
complained about instability of certain applications, notably KDevelop,
Quanta Plus, and XMMS. Although power management reportedly works, there are
still unresolved issues, possibly related to the use of the hotplug kernel
module. Several users reported complete system freezes while running the
2.6.3 kernel, and also during the package installation stage of the initial
system install. A possible workaround for those experiencing hardware-related
problems is to boot the 2.4.25 kernel, which is provided as a second choice.
Despite the above mentioned problems, the overall experience of users, as
expressed on public forums and mailing list, seems to be of delight over the
speed improvements and the general look and feel of Mandrakelinux 10.0. Those
with "unlucky" hardware combinations resulting in system crashes, will have
to wait and see if the problems get fixed in Mandrakelinux 10.0 Official
coming out in May, or look elsewhere - possibly wait for the new SUSE LINUX
9.1 (expected in April) or Fedora Core 2 (scheduled for release in early
May). But for the majority of users, Mandrakelinux 10.0 is a superb
distribution, with dramatic performance enhancements, well-designed, highly
usable desktops and convenient configuration tools and wizards. A solid 8 on
a scale from 1 to 10.
-----------------------
* Note. The official press
release, as well as the features page refer
to the product as "Mandrakelinux", rather than "Mandrake Linux", as was the
case with previous releases. Although MandrakeSoft has yet to make any
official announcements about the product's name change, this has presumably
something to do with the recent trademark
dispute over the use of the word "Mandrake". Therefore, in this article
we shall refer to the MandrakeSoft's latest release as "Mandrakelinux".
Comments (2 posted)
Distribution News
Mandrakesoft has announced that its new flagship operating system
'Mandrakelinux 10.0 Community' has been released. 10.0 Community includes a
2.6 kernel, the Native POSIX Threads Library (NPTL), KDE 3.2 and GNOME 2.4,
and more.
Full Story (comments: none)
The
Debian Weekly News for March 9, 2004 is
now available. This week: Debian Ham; new home for alioth services; a
collection of Open Source advocacy papers; questions for DPL candidates;
and more.
Wichert Akkerman reports on the status of
alioth, arch, and svn. "My apologies for the extended downtime and
especially the lack of commit access for arch and svn.debian.org. There is
a silver lining though: things should be a lot more stable than they ever
were from now on due to better hardware and a better configuration."
Voting on a General Resolution to decide on
future handling of the non-free section is under way. All Debian
developers are encouraged to vote.
The DebConf4 call for papers is out. The
deadline for submissions is April, 1st.
Comments (1 posted)
The
Fedora News
Updates #7 has been released. This issue covers Fedora Core 2 test2;
the Jargon Buster; a next-generation input method; Fedora on lower-end
machines; something from Fedora-Legacy; and other topics.
Red Hat, Inc. and the Fedora Project have announced the availability of a port of Fedora
Core 1 to AMD64 - the first 64-bit port of a Fedora Project core release.
A new mailing
list is now available, for SELinux
discussion.
This less update fixes segfaults on certain
types of files.
Comments (none posted)
The Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for the week of March 1, 2004 is out; with a
look at the Gentoo booth at Chemnitzer Linuxtag, and more.
Full Story (comments: none)
Trustix Secure Linux 2.1 is now available. This is billed mainly as a
maintenance release, but that didn't stop the Trustix folks from throwing
in a few things like Samba 3, XFS, and a few other new packages.
Full Story (comments: 4)
IBM and Red Flag have announced that IBM's WebSphere will provide product
support for Red Flag Linux.
Full Story (comments: none)
LynuxWorks has
announced LynuxWorks BlueCat Linux 5.0 BSP, a board support package
(BSP) based on the Linux 2.6 kernel for the Apple PowerPC G5, a 64-bit
desktop processor.
Comments (none posted)
The
DistroWatch
Weekly for March 8, 2004 is out with a look at Progeny Componentized
Linux and other topics.
Comments (none posted)
FreeSBIE is a live CD version of
FreeBSD. The project is developed by the main Italian FreeBSD User Group:
GUFI. (Thanks to Per Jotun, who found
the link in
this digi.no
Nerdvana article [in Norwegian].)
Comments (none posted)
NewsForge
talks with
Luke Mewburn, of the NetBSD Core Group about the release of 1.6.2 and
beyond. "
Is there any timeline for the release of 2.0?
We had
planned to branch 2.0 early this year. I would conservatively say that
we'll have the release shipped by the middle of the year, although I would
hope that it occurs before then.
What goodies will 2.0 bring us?
SMP
on more platforms, including i386, macppc, sparc, alpha, and vax. Kernel
assisted threads ("schedular activations"). Fully dynamically linked
userland."
Comments (none posted)
FootNotes
reports that a
new package building
server for FreeBSD GNOME
packages is online. Also the GNOME 2.6 Beta 1 desktop is now available for
FreeBSD.
Comments (none posted)
Updated SANE packages are available, fixing a problem with shared libraries.
Full Story (comments: none)
Minor distribution updates
Astaro Security Linux has released
beta v4.737 with major bugfixes. "
Changes: This release
includes high availability fixes, a fix for the Synratelimiter, various
IPsec fixes, a lot of other small fixes and improvements, and speedup by
removing some debug code."
Comments (none posted)
Fli4l (Floppy ISDN/DSL) has released
development v2.1.6 with minor bugfixes. "
Changes: This release
should work with inode (DSL in Austria). lpdsrv should now work with USB
printers. Support for SFTP was added. There are several bugfixes and minor
enhancements. New software includes busybox 1.0pre8, mini_httpd 1.19, new
dhcpd and dhcp-relay (relaying now works), kernel PCMCIA, and dropbear
(SSH2 server) 0.41."
Comments (none posted)
INSERT has
released
v1.2.4 with minor feature enhancements. "
Changes: The cdrecord,
chkrootkit, clamav, e2fsprogs, jfstools, mdadm, mkisofs,and xfsprogs
packages were updated, and the dvd+rw-tools package was added. The clamav
virus database was also updated. catchFirebird was replaced by huntFirefox,
and linuxrc and the autoconfiguration script were updated. The missing man
pages for reiserfsprogs was included, and a few dead links were
removed. Auto-ejecting of the CD at halt time now works."
Comments (none posted)
KNOPPIX has
released
v3.3-20040216
with minor bugfixes. "
Changes: /etc/X11/Xsession was updated to fix
X-Login on the installed version. pcitable was updated for nforce ethernet
chipsets. A timezone fix was made. DefaultColorDepth is not set in
XF86Config-4 if using the fbdev module. The empty /etc/network/interfaces
broadcast line was fixed in netcardconfig."
Comments (1 posted)
Local Area Security Linux
has released
v0.5 with major feature enhancements. "
Changes: The kernel has
been recompiled to insure NTFS r/w and monitor mode for wireless. All
packages have been upgraded. There are cosmetic and usability
improvements."
Comments (none posted)
Rock Linux has
announced the released of ROCK Linux 2.0 (Codename: Rafaella).
"
Instead of .tar.bz2 the newly invented .gem package format is used -
so now ROCK Linux features dependency resolution during the installation as
well as additional meta-data for the end-user."
Comments (15 posted)
Source Mage GNU/Linux has released
v0.9.2
with minor feature enhancements. "
Changes: A choice of either a
2.4.25 or 2.6.3 kernel is available. The actual installed system will be
almost identical except for the kernel difference and the addition of a
sysfs entry to /etc/fstab. The installer itself has had many features added
and some bugs fixed."
Comments (none posted)
System-Down::Rescue has released
v1.0pre6
with minor feature enhancements. "
Changes: This version includes a
lot of bugfixes and a few new features. The kernel has been updated to
2.4.23, and most of the libraries have been updated. New setup scripts were
added to improve hardware detection and to speed up the start up
operations. DHCP is used for automatic network configuration."
Comments (none posted)
wrt54g-linux has
released
v0.4a with minor feature enhancements. "
Changes: This version
supports current Linksys firmwares that have the "Ping Bug" fixed."
Comments (none posted)
Distribution reviews
FCW.com
compares several desktop distributions. Libranet 2.8.1 Flagship
Edition, LindowsOS 4.5, Lycoris' Desktop/LX, Mandrake Linux 9.2 and Xandros
Desktop OS Version 2-Deluxe Edition are reviewed. "
Our Linux
desktops were installed and tested in a network configuration that mirrors
what many agencies and corporations are using today. Our Linux desktops
interacted successfully with Windows systems, Macintosh machines and
server-based resources, including FreeBSD, Sun Microsystems Inc.'s Solaris,
and IBM Corp.'s iSeries and AIX."
Comments (1 posted)
The Seattle Times
looks
at XandrosOS and LindowsOS. "
Lindows has a slicker interface and
emulates Windows so well that it repeats several of my pet Windows
peeves. Xandros' user-interface has more obvious Linux legacy to it but
shouldn't stymie the first-timer." (Thanks to Phillip Warner)
Comments (none posted)
eWeek
takes
Fedora Core 2 (test) for a spin. "
We also found that Fedora's
implementation of the KDE Project's KDE 3.2 and the GNOME Project's GNOME
2.5.3 desktop environments were much improved compared with the versions of
those interfaces that shipped with Fedora Core 1."
Comments (none posted)
Page editor: Rebecca Sobol
Next page: Development>>