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posted by takyon on Monday December 28 2015, @06:09AM   Printer-friendly
from the without-systemd-again dept.

The first release of the lightweight Linux distro, antiX (pronounced "Antiques"), was in 2007. It was spun off of MEPIS. With the exception of 1 controversial release, the antiX ISO has always been able to fit on a CD.

The last release of MEPIS was in July 2013. Distrowatch calls MEPIS "Dormant". The antiX developers have picked up the torch and built a DVD-sized distro they call MX.

Softpedia reports:

The final release of antiX MX-15 [codename "Fusion"] comes after two Beta and two RC (Release Candidate) builds, during which the distribution's maintainers implemented numerous new features, updated some of the most important core components and applications, and fixed many of the bugs reported by users since the previous stable release of the OS.

antiX MX-15 is based on the latest and most advanced Debian GNU/Linux 8.2 (Jessie) operating system, which means that it inherits many of its features, including the Linux kernel 4.2 packages. The OS is currently built around the lightweight Xfce 4.12 desktop environment.

[...] Prominent features of antiX MX-15 include the automatic enabling of the Broadcom b43 and b44 drivers, support for installing the operating system on UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) machines, numerous improvements to the Advanced LiveUSB tool, as well as several under-the-hood changes.

antiX MX-15 comes with some of the best open source applications, such as Mozilla Firefox 43.0, Mozilla Thunderbird 38.4, LibreOffice 4.3.3.2, VLC Media Player 2.2.1, and Clementine 1.2.3. Additionally, the distribution improves the Settings Manager and lets users install numerous apps using one-click extras with MX Package Installer.

The antiX MX original applications are also included, and among them are Apt Notifier, Boot Repair, Broadcom Manager, Check Apt GPG, Codecs Installer, Find Shares, Flash Manager, Package Installer, Switch User, Persistence/Remaster, User Manager, Create Live USB, and Sound Card.

The News section of antix.mepis.org notes:

Just like MX-14, this release defaults to sysVinit

[...] Both [the 32- and 64-bit] ISO files weigh in at around 1GB in size.

[...] Download page (for torrents, mirror choices, and pre-loaded media purchase): http://www.mepiscommunity.org/download-links
Project home page: http://www.mxlinux.org


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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Monday December 28 2015, @08:01AM

    by frojack (1554) on Monday December 28 2015, @08:01AM (#281626) Journal

    Seems like a lot of new distros and updated distros are coming out these days.

    I've been trying out a few of them myself, mostly in virtual machines. Just trying one a week seems
    to chew up a lot of time. It would be nice to have an installer like you imagine.

    But I suspect it would take all the adventure and learning out of it, because one linux, once installed
    is pretty much like another as far as the day to day use. The DE you choose has a lot more to do
    with the experience than the distro you choose.

    Someone recommended Manjaro here on SN a week ago, and I've downloaded that to test.
    Also grabbed the beta of the latest Mint, and I've been playing with Salix (slackware for lazy
    installers) for a while.

    I'm sort of expecting my normal everyday distro, Opensuse, to implode under MicroFocus's ownership.
    Just getting prepared.

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