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posted by cmn32480 on Sunday May 22 2016, @01:56PM   Printer-friendly
from the ready-for-prime-time dept.

Eric Hameleers announces

[May 18,] on the final day of my short holiday (of sorts), I prepped and released version 1.0.0 of my liveslak project. It is stable and the bugs that were reported (plus some more) have been taken care of.

The "1.0.0" marker is not the end of its development, of course. It means that I consider the project production-ready. It will be used to create Live Editions of Slackware 14.2 (64bit and 32bit) when that is released. There's still some more ideas for liveslak that I want to implement and those will become available as 1.x releases.

For demonstration purposes, I have generated a new set of ISO images using liveslak version 1.0.0. There are ISO images for a full Slackware (64bit and 32bit versions), 64bit Plasma5 and MATE variants, and the 700MB small XFCE variant (also 64bit). They are based on Slackware-current dated "Thu May 12 01:50:21 UTC 2016".

[...] I will re-write [the original blog post] into a landing page for anyone who is interested in a Live Edition of Slackware. [...] All previous articles about the liveslak project aka Slackware Live Edition are accessible through this shortcut link, by the way [links to changelogs].


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 22 2016, @09:05PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 22 2016, @09:05PM (#349680)

    I've wondered a bit about that OS (but never got ambitious enough to actually try it).
    Do you recall the size of your ISO?
    How is the state of default apps|repos?

    Ever have to compile an app from source?
    Where did you get the source?

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

  • (Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Tuesday May 24 2016, @01:47AM

    I've only compiled from source when I've been contributing to the development.

    BeOS didn't have a real package manager; Haiku does.

    The default apps are most of what you need, however I don't really like Pe, the "Programmer's Editor". I'd rather use vi, which does not come by default.

    It has a posix layer so most *NIX apps will build out of the box. Some are included by default.

    Haiku's source is at http://cgit.haiku-os.org/ [haiku-os.org]

    There are nightly automated builds. Most of them are quite stable. Download the latest nightly, it will probably be OK for you.

    It runs fine in a VM if you just want to try it out. It can run natively on lots of hardware, but I expect the need for more drivers is why it's not beta yet.

    --
    Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 24 2016, @09:14AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 24 2016, @09:14AM (#350212)

      has a posix layer so most *NIX apps will build out of the box

      Cool.

      the need for more drivers

      When it comes to hardware, I've thought of Linux as one of The Big 3 for quite some time.
      gregkh and the Linux Driver Project guys have Linux users quite spoiled.

      Thanks for the info.

      -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]