News and Editorials
July 21, 2004
This article was contributed by Joe Klemmer
With the release of Fedora Linux into the wild by Red Hat the
proliferation of distributions based on it has been growing. This
is a good thing. Even with Fedora Core Linux being more community
based, no distribution can be all things to all people. This is a
review of one of these new distributions,
Cobind Linux.
According to their website -
Cobind Desktop merges the reliability of Fedora Core Linux, the speed
of a lightweight desktop environment, and the usability of a
best-of-breed application suite into a basic, high-performance Linux
platform designed with the average user in mind.
Great market speak, but what does it mean? Cobind is built on
Fedora Core 1 but striped down to fit on one CD. They did this by
leaving out the big and complex software. No OpenOffice. No
Evolution. No GNOME or KDE. No development tools. Just a light
weight yet functional desktop OS. But lest you think that they
skimped on the available tools and apps, the default install
still consists of 537 RPM packages.
What you do get is the wonderful Xfce4
Desktop Environment and what Cobind refers to as the "best-of-breed"
applications. These include Firefox for web browsing, Thunderbird for
news and email, gaim for all your IM needs and a productivity suite made
up of AbiWord, Gnumeric, the GIMP, XMMS and GnuCash. It does include
the three main file managers in Konqueror, Nautilus and XFFM but
otherwise keeps the duplication of programs to a minimum. There are no
servers in this distribution as it is well focused on the desktop. But
enough of the talking, let's get to the test drive.
Anyone who's ever installed any of the Red Hat or Fedora Linux
versions will be right at home here. Cobind uses Anaconda for
installation and configuration. There's no section in the install
for selecting packages but that is to be expected with a
distribution focused on simple and easy. Just a few clicks and
the occasional input screen.
After the install and the normal "firstboot" screen you get
the Cobind login screen. It's a clean and pleasant configuration
of GDM (seen here running under
VMware).
Once logged in, you see a simple desktop with a panel at the
bottom, a bar at the top and the familiar
desktop icons of Nautilus. It doesn't have many menus, just
the applications. The apps are, from left to right, Terminal,
File Manager (xffm), Firefox, Thunderbird, gaim, AbiWord, Gedit,
Gnumeric, GnuCash, Mplayer, XMMS and k3b. The desktop is managed
by Nautilus instead of the xfdesktop4 (part of xfce4). If you
kill off Nautilus you get xfdesktop4, which is quite good in its
own right. Next on the panel comes the configuration menu
followed by the Software Manager (more in this later),
Help/Documentation, Lock, Log out and the clock.
While the layout and available/clickable programs may seem
quite sparse, the distribution comes with everything a home user
might need. And it's all configured so that very little user
intervention is ever needed. Should any configuration be needed
all of the config tools from Fedora are also available.
The most significant part of Cobind Linux is the Software
Manager. Cobind has made a GUI front end to the command line RPM
management tool yum. This program makes using yum very intuitive
and easy. You can update, add or remove RPMs from any repository
you want. Adding new repositories is as easy as clicking an Add
button. The program gives you three tabs at the top half of the
window where you can see RPMs to Install, Remove and Update, if
there are any available updates. There's also a Settings tab from
where you manage the repositories. The bottom half is divided
again into two with the left side giving you a description of the
RPM that is selected (from any of the above tabs). On the right
is the output of the actual yum command so you can see what is
actually being shown "under the hood". These last two features
make this tool better than Red Hat's up2date, in this writers
opinion. With this Software Manager you can easily install any of
the programs that you might want, like OpenOffice for example.
Just select it from the Install tab and off you go.
Cobind Linux might feel a bit restrictive to some seasoned
Linux users, especially with it's lack of any development tools,
but it does make for a very nice home desktop system. Fast, light
but with plenty of capabilities, Cobind has some interesting
potential as a Linux distribution.
Comments (2 posted)
Distribution News
The
OpenPKG project has announced
version 2.1 of its OpenPKG software. New in 2.1: increased platform
support, lots of new packages in the repository, and more. Click below for
additional details.
Full Story (comments: none)
The
Debian Weekly News for July 20, 2004 is
out. Topics this week include the University of Zaragoza in Spain which
plans to distribute 50,000 copies of its Debian/GNOME based distribution;
the General Resolution to force AMD64 into Sarge; Debian's increasing
market share; GNUstep policy violation; GNU Compiler Collection 3.4 in
unstable; and more.
The Debian-Installer team met on IRC on July 17. Here are the minutes of that meeting.
This Bits from the listmasters post reports
on new lists, changed lists and has other information to help you get the
most out of all 169 available Debian mailing lists.
This week's Front page contains an analysis
of the General Resolution to force AMD64 in
Sarge. We'll just add a post from
Martin Michlmayr, Debian Project Leader, on the steps he has taken to
resolve this issue.
Ian Lynagh has made two new package status web
pages available. One gives you the status of all your packages (or an
arbitrary list of packages) on all arches, the other gives you the
information in the buildd status text files.
Comments (none posted)
The
Gentoo Weekly Newsletter for the week of
July 19, 2004 is out with a look at the Gentoo MacOS X release.
The Gentoo Project has announced the release
of tenshi 0.3 with some major improvements. Tenshi, formerly known as
Wasabi, is a log monitoring program initially developed for Gentoo
infrastructure servers. Tenshi 0.3.1, a bug
fix release, is also available.
Comments (none posted)
Mandrakesoft has announced the availability of a new update service aimed
at helping corporations keep their systems up-to-date: Mandrakeonline
provides a wide range of valuable services for taking care of all updates
on a range of Mandrakelinux systems, at a low cost.
Full Story (comments: none)
The ChannelTimes
takes
a quick look at ELX. "
ELX Linux, the Hyderabad-based Linux
distributor, is overwhelmed with the sales of its Biz Desk 4.0 Linux and
claims that it is months ahead of the competition. Manojit Majumdar,
head-sales, ELX, explained, "When we started selling three months ago over
the Internet, the response was very encouraging and we set up a channel in
Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh. We will now be building our channel in Delhi and
Bangalore as well.""
Comments (none posted)
Desktop Linux
takes a look
at Lineox Enterprise Linux. "
Lineox claims to reduce the cost of
Linux by eliminating many of the production fees associated with boxed sets
and bundled support programs. Always Current Lineox Enterprise Linux is
based on freely distributable programs found in Red Hat Enterprise Linux
3.0 AS/ES/WS, Red Hat Cluster Suite, and Red Hat Developer Suite."
Comments (none posted)
Fedora Core 2 updates:
Comments (none posted)
New Distributions
H3Knix is a small,
source-based, desktop Linux distribution. It provides a custom package
management system based on "capsules", which allows the user to select the
functionality they require (e.g., "Dialup Internet access"), and it will
automatically retrieve all required applications, including relevant
dependencies. H3Knix joins the list at version 1.2 released July 14, 2004.
Comments (none posted)
The
Lisp
Resource Kit is a dedicated development/learning environment on a
self-booting CD. It is designed to be an easy to use single resource for
those who are interested in exploring Common Lisp, regardless of their
experience or domain of expertise. (Thanks to Chris Riddoch)
Comments (none posted)
Minor distribution updates
blueflops has released
v2.0.5
with minor feature enhancements. "
Changes: New translations are
available for French and German. The Latin-1 console font has been replaced
with Latin-9."
Comments (none posted)
Coyote Linux has released
v2.11
with major security fixes. "
Changes: This release upgrades the SSH
server to dropbear 0.43 to fix a potential security problem."
Comments (none posted)
Crash Recovery Kit has released an
X86_64/AMD64 port of CRK 2.6.7. Click below for details.
Full Story (comments: none)
Echelon Linux has released
v0.2.
"
Changes: Echelonlinux has been redesigned from scratch. Only
Nagios, NTOP, and NESSUSd are integrated. The administration interface skin
is now derived from the echelonlinux Web site."
Comments (none posted)
Hakin9
Live has released
v2.0.1
with code cleanup. "
Changes: This version has been created from
scratch, based on Aurox Live 9.3. Some artifacts from an early,
experimental stage of Hakin9 Live were cleaned up. Some problems with
booting h9l on some hardware were fixed. XFCE4 was added as a new window
manager option. This version has most of the tools that were in previous
version, as well as some more."
Comments (none posted)
LEAF has released
Bering-uClibc
2.2-beta5 with minor feature enhancements. "
Changes: This
release updates ash to dash 0.5.1. There are various other upstream updates
(dropbear, iptables, shorewall, etc.). PCMCIA has been reworked to support
more cards."
Comments (none posted)
The
MoviX project has released
MoviX2
v0.3.1RC1 with major feature enhancements. "
Changes: In this
release, all new MoviX features (including the two 'console' interfaces)
have been imported, XFree86 has been upgraded to 4.4.0, and experimental
support for proprietary ATI and Kyro video drivers have been added."
Comments (none posted)
PLD RescueCD has released
v1.93
with major feature enhancements. "
Changes:
The kernel was updated to PLD 2.4.27rc1 with NTFS 2.1.6b and cifs. 276
packages were updated. The serial console was fixed. Hardware detection was
improved. Support was added for remote network boot via PXE. Autodetection
of sagem Eagle 8051 Analog was added. 40 new packages were added, including
clamav, linux-atm, grub, star, and wipe."
Comments (none posted)
Distribution reviews
Open for Business
continues
configuring Slackware for desktop use. "
In Part II we will focus
on the hardest part: making sound and video work. Sound is not especially
difficult; but video is. Fortunately, after this step, it is an easy
ride. Now, do not despair: I said that this part is hard, not that it is
arcane, difficult to understand, or for "Unix wizards" only. It is hard
because it differs so much from other distros which have, for the most
part, better tools to do the task. But you can certainly do it and you have
a very good chance to succeed."
Comments (none posted)
Page editor: Rebecca Sobol
Next page: Development>>