| Notices |
Welcome to LinuxQuestions.org, a friendly and active Linux Community.
You are currently viewing LQ as a guest. By joining our community you will have the ability to post topics, receive our newsletter, use the advanced search, subscribe to threads and access many other special features. Registration is quick, simple and absolutely free. Join our community today!
Note that registered members see fewer ads, and ContentLink is completely disabled once you log in.
Are you new to LinuxQuestions.org? Visit the following links:
Site Howto |
Site FAQ |
Sitemap |
Register Now
If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us. If you need to reset your password, click here.
Having a problem logging in? Please visit this page to clear all LQ-related cookies.
 |
GNU/Linux Basic Guide
This 255-page guide will provide you with the keys to understand the philosophy of free software, teach you how to use and handle it, and give you the tools required to move easily in the world of GNU/Linux. Many users and administrators will be taking their first steps with this GNU/Linux Basic guide and it will show you how to approach and solve the problems you encounter.
Click Here to receive this Complete Guide absolutely free. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reviews
|
Views
|
Date of last review
|
|
2
|
24556
|
10-14-2004
|
|
 |
|
Recommended By
|
Average Price
|
Average Rating
|
|
100% of reviewers
|
None indicated
|
8.5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Description:
|
Damn Small Linux is a business card size (50MB) bootable Live CD Linux distribution. Despite its minuscule size it strives to have a functional and easy to use desktop.
|
|
|
|
 |
08-06-2004, 07:03 PM
|
#1
|
Registered: Jul 2004
Distribution: Knoppix,Xandros,DSL,Fedora Core2
Posts: 38
Rep:
|
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid?: D/L | Rating: 9
|
Pros:
|
Great on old hardware or new, Can't use knoppix? try this, slick harddrive install
|
|
Cons:
|
Can't write to NTFS... yet?
|
I can think of nothing bad to say about this thing at this point. It "just works". Whether you want a repair tool for a messed up computer, A slick little live CD, or something fast and easy to install on old hardware, here it is. I have used this CD on every piece of hardware I have, from a P166 to a PIV laptop. I have had NO problems with it. If I were to complain about one thing, it would be the lack of NTFS write ability. From what I understand though, that's coming so I will wait. This thing is fantastic for resurecting old hardware. I quickly made a boot floppy and had it installed and running on a P166 in minutes. It uses Fluxbox as it's window manager, which is great on older hardware. I even like the patched Dillo browser, sure it's no firefox, but then firefox is just a click away if you're on broadband. Once you have Firefox and maybe a few other tools from the click and run repository slap 'em on a USB key and you're set. The CD and a USB key will fit in your pocket and you're off to fix other people's computers, or just surf on 'em without leaving a trace.
Try it, you'll like it.
|
|
|
|
10-14-2004, 02:55 PM
|
#2
|
Registered: Feb 2004
Distribution: Debian-based, Slackware 10x+
Posts: 136
Rep: 
|
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid?: D/L | Rating: 8
|
Pros:
|
LiveDistro, Usable for Older HW, Compact BBC
|
|
Cons:
|
Certain Tweaks Apparently Used
|
Have been using DSL 0.7.x for awhile as a liveCD (bootable self-contained Linux distro),
Here are, IMO, its overwhelming positives:
- Very portable in BBC or 8cm-CD format
- Can be used on older hardware such as on Pentium I CPU's with 16MB RAM or less, especially useful in runlevel 2 mode (i.e., no XWindows)
- Can be used used as a rescue CD similar in many respects to the venerable Linux boot floppy 'tomsrtbt'
- Has nice, lean version of XWindows with all the necessary apps I use, without the extraneous apps and bloat of the fullest Debian-based-liveCD available today, Knoppix
- Is extendable with extra DSL-rated packages the DSL-team refers to as 'myDSL Extensions' (see http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/distributions/damnsmall/mydsl/index.html)
- Is installable onto a system's harddrive for a complete, harddrive-bootable, Debian system.
- One can perform standard harddrive performance-tuning even w/o a DSL harddrive install, such as
1) creating a harddrive swap partition (that the DSL BBC will recognize) which is double the amt of physically-installed RAM, 2) copy source files from the above-listed myDSL Extensions repository or even standard Debian .deb pkg's to a harddrive's /usr/local partition (sources go into /usr/local/src as per Linux convention), compile and run these binaries (e.g., OpenOffice, Firefox, etc.) from the harddrives /usr/local/bin directory, WHILE THE DSL LIVECD IS STILL RUNNING THE SYSTEM! What a CD-diskspace-saving and performance benefit!!
Negatives are some of the tweaks that DamnSmallLinux has done to fit all the stuff into a BBC-CD or 8cm-CD.
This LQ person, for one, would prefer not having Naim-IRC stuff, but would definitely prefer some key security-scanning items. Am somewhat leery of those myDSL-extensions listed in above link rated yellow or red for DSL v.7.x, especially for lower-end systems (read low <32MB RAM)
Overall, this liveCD distro is the best of its kind.
Would rate this an 8.
|
|
|
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:43 AM.
|
|
LinuxQuestions.org is looking for people interested in writing
Editorials, Articles, Reviews, and more. If you'd like to contribute
content, let us know.
|
Latest Threads
LQ News
|
|