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Old 04-01-2023, 05:17 AM   #1
kazzan
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Question Is the Slackware Linux website hosted on Ubuntu?


Even considering today's date, I still found the following post and especially the video interesting
The official Slackware Linux website is hosted on Ubuntu

Maybe our benevolent dictator for life should have another go at getting an SSL certificate installed on slackware.com.
 
Old 04-01-2023, 05:33 AM   #2
rizitis
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Talking

Code:
$ date
Code:
                                                          
  ██████  ██▓    ▄▄▄       ▄████▄   ██ ▄█▀ █     █░ ▄▄▄       ██▀███  ▓█████  
▒██    ▒ ▓██▒   ▒████▄    ▒██▀ ▀█   ██▄█▒ ▓█░ █ ░█░▒████▄    ▓██ ▒ ██▒▓█   ▀  
░ ▓██▄   ▒██░   ▒██  ▀█▄  ▒▓█    ▄ ▓███▄░ ▒█░ █ ░█ ▒██  ▀█▄  ▓██ ░▄█ ▒▒███    
 ▒   ██▒▒██░   ░██▄▄▄▄██ ▒▓▓▄ ▄██▒▓██ █▄  ░█░ █ ░█ ░██▄▄▄▄██ ▒██▀▀█▄  ▒▓█  ▄   
▒██████▒▒░██████▒▓█   ▓██▒▒ ▓███▀░▒██▒ █▄░░██▒██▓  ▓█   ▓██▒░██▓ ▒██▒░▒████▒ 
▒ ▒▓▒ ▒ ░░ ▒░▓  ░▒▒   ▓▒█░░ ░▒ ▒  ░▒ ▒▒ ▓▒░ ▓░▒ ▒   ▒▒   ▓▒█░░ ▒▓ ░▒▓░░░ ▒░ ░ 
░ ░▒  ░ ░░ ░ ▒  ░ ▒   ▒▒ ░  ░  ▒   ░ ░▒ ▒░  ▒ ░ ░    ▒   ▒▒ ░  ░▒ ░ ▒░ ░ ░  ░ 
░ ░  ░    ░ ░    ░   ▒   ░        ░ ░░ ░   ░   ░    ░   ▒     ░░   ░    ░    
  ░      ░  ░     ░  ░░ ░      ░  ░       ░          ░  ░   ░        ░  ░ 
                         ░

Last edited by rizitis; 04-01-2023 at 05:34 AM.
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 06:46 AM   #3
solarfields
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kazzan View Post
Even considering today's date, I still found the following post and especially the video interesting
The official Slackware Linux website is hosted on Ubuntu

Maybe our benevolent dictator for life should have another go at getting an SSL certificate installed on slackware.com.
what date is today?
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 07:18 AM   #4
marav
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Code:
°  /
 °/\/
  \/\
   \
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 07:20 AM   #5
LuckyCyborg
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kazzan View Post
Even considering today's date, I still found the following post and especially the video interesting
The official Slackware Linux website is hosted on Ubuntu

Maybe our benevolent dictator for life should have another go at getting an SSL certificate installed on slackware.com.
So, our BDFL, just like other millions of webmasters, appreciates the robustness of Ubuntu Server Edition. I see no problem there.

Last edited by LuckyCyborg; 04-01-2023 at 07:22 AM.
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 09:41 AM   #6
hitest
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April 1, 2023.
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 10:53 AM   #7
marav
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Code:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: Apache/2.2.22
ETag: "3c6282-1889-5d723584fb840"
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Content-Type: text/html
Vary: Accept-Encoding
Content-Encoding: gzip
Content-Length: 2070
Date: Sat, 01 Apr 2023 15:50:06 GMT
Last-Modified: Thu, 03 Feb 2022 20:54:49 GMT
It looks like it's a Slackware 12.0 base
Code:
Curious about the machine running this site, eh? Also fairly high on the importance scale 
(for this site, anyway) is the box itself. The machine is a Pentium III, 600 MHz, with 512 megabytes of RAM. 
It runs (of course) Slackware Linux, and does an efficient and reliable job even with moderately old hardware. 
The slackware.com site has been known to run for well over a year without a reboot.
with a caveat, the probability that the information is up to date :-)

Last edited by marav; 04-01-2023 at 10:56 AM.
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 01:08 PM   #8
amikoyan
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A post from 1991:
Quote:
From spaf@cs.purdue.EDU Thu Apr 4 23:11:22 1991
Path: ai-lab!mintaka!mit-eddie!wuarchive!usc!apple!amdahl!walldrug!moscvax!perdue!spaf
From: spaf@cs.purdue.EDU (Gene Spafford)
Newsgroups: news.announce.important,news.admin
Subject: Warning: April Fools Time again (forged messages on the loose!)
Message-ID: <4-1-1991@medusa.cs.purdue.edu>
Date: 1 Apr 91 00:00:00 GMT
Expires: 1 May 91 00:00:00 GMT
Followup-To: news.admin
Organization: Dept. of Computer Sciences, Purdue Univ.
Lines: 25
Approved: spaf@cs.purdue.EDU
Xref: ai-lab news.announce.important:19 news.admin:8235

Warning: April 1 is rapidly approaching, and with it comes a USENET
tradition. On April Fools day comes a series of forged, tongue-in-cheek
messages, either from non-existent sites or using the name of a Well Known
USENET person. In general, these messages are harmless and meant as a joke,
and people who respond to these messages without thinking, either by flaming
or otherwise responding, generally end up looking rather silly when the
forgery is exposed.

So, for the few weeks, if you see a message that seems completely out
of line or is otherwise unusual, think twice before posting a followup
or responding to it; it's very likely a forgery.

There are a few ways of checking to see if a message is a forgery. These
aren't foolproof, but since most forgery posters want people to figure it
out, they will allow you to track down the vast majority of forgeries:

o Russian computers. For historic reasons most forged messages have
as part of their Path: a non-existent (we think!) russian
computer, either kremvax or moscvax. Other possibilities are
nsacyber or wobegon. Please note, however, that walldrug is a real
site and isn't a forgery.

o Posted dates. Almost invariably, the date of the posting is forged
to be April 1.

o Funky Message-ID. Subtle hints are often lodged into the
Message-Id, as that field is more or less an unparsed text string
and can contain random information. Common values include pi,
the phone number of the red phone in the white house, and the
name of the forger's parrot.

o subtle mispellings. Look for subtle misspellings of the host names
in the Path: field when a message is forged in the name of a Big
Name USENET person. This is done so that the person being forged
actually gets a chance to see the message and wonder when he
actually posted it.

Forged messages, of course, are not to be condoned. But they happen, and
it's important for people on the net not to over-react. They happen at this
time every year, and the forger generally gets their kick from watching the
novice users take the posting seriously and try to flame their tails off. If
we can keep a level head and not react to these postings, they'll taper off
rather quickly and we can return to the normal state of affairs: chaos.

Thanks for your support.

Gene Spafford, Net.God (and probably tired of seeing this message)
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 02:16 PM   #9
pghvlaans
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Quote:
wobegon
April Fool's jokes: where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking and all the children are above average.
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 03:53 PM   #10
Loomx
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Distribution: Slackware
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Very disappointed that it didn't end in a Rick-roll...
 
Old 04-01-2023, 04:02 PM   #11
hitest
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Patrick Volkerding: Slackware to become an Ubuntu fork
 
Old 04-01-2023, 04:37 PM   #12
LuckyCyborg
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Loomx View Post
Very disappointed that it didn't end in a Rick-roll...
For this would have been needed just a single line in ChangeLog, like bellow...
Code:
a/systemd-253-x86_64-1.txz:  Added.
 
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Old 04-01-2023, 07:11 PM   #13
kazzan
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Distribution: Gentoo Linux, Slackware ARM
Posts: 27

Original Poster
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Quote:
Originally Posted by marav View Post
It looks like it's a Slackware 12.0 base
Code:
Curious about the machine running this site, eh? Also fairly high on the importance scale 
(for this site, anyway) is the box itself. The machine is a Pentium III, 600 MHz, with 512 megabytes of RAM. 
It runs (of course) Slackware Linux, and does an efficient and reliable job even with moderately old hardware. 
The slackware.com site has been known to run for well over a year without a reboot.
with a caveat, the probability that the information is up to date :-)
As it happens, Slack 12.0 was my first introduction to Slackware. It was (tough) love on first install hahaha. It was a stellar release for those good old Pentium days.
Somehow, I can actually believe that slackware.com runs Slackware 12.0 on a Pentium III
 
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Old 04-02-2023, 01:50 AM   #14
RadicalDreamer
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Nice one! That song sounds familiar. It reminds me of the Minion's Song by Amplifier.
 
Old 04-02-2023, 02:29 AM   #15
solarfields
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kazzan View Post
Somehow, I can actually believe that slackware.com runs Slackware 12.0 on a Pentium III
me as well
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