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By Rupert Goodwins
Posted on ZDNet News: Jan 15, 2004 3:47:00 PM

COMMENTARY--One of my dirty little secrets is that I have never successfully installed Linux on anything. I've tried many times over the years, because I bought into the idea that it could revitalize old computers. I'd cobble together a 486 processor, some no-name disk controller, a clonky old hard disk, a VGA card from the Boer War, and off we'd go. My Linux experience terminated shortly thereafter with an incomprehensible error message concerning IRQ 9, lost interrupts or goblins in the bidirectional bus buffers.

Fair enough. I didn't get where I am today by not courting gratuitous hardware problems through trying to do things on the cheap.

What put me off, though, was my inability to fix them. I normally laugh at IRQ conflicts, and giggle like a girl in the face of IO address clashes. In these cases, I was stumped. The errors had few clues for their rectification, and browsing online forums only revealed other people piteously reporting the same. Each time I tried to get Linux running, I seemed to end up at the point of going through the source code before remembering that I gave up writing operating systems some years ago. It didn't help that the friendly Linux experts I drafted in to help also ended up stumped: "It does that with that chipset sometimes" is not a song to lift the spirits.

There was always the feeling that with a bit more work, a little more fiddling and card-swapping, a few more midnight stints, I could have got things humming--but with age comes impatience.

Messing with hardware for its own sake is less fun at thirty-something than eighteen, likewise learning fifteen incomprehensible command syntaxes before breakfast: besides, there's a whole Internet of good things to play with once you've got your browser going. Why wait? No matter how you cut it, Linux at home meant an anorak in the wardrobe.

But now there's Knoppix. The promise, as always, was tempting: download the disk image, burn it onto a CD-ROM and reboot. It will sniff your hardware, configure itself and just run. Instant Linux. Nah, I thought. I've been caught that way before. Still, I've always been good at letting faith triumph over experience.

The only remotely technical things involved were finding a way to persuade Windows XP to burn a bootable CD-ROM--a tiny utility called ISO Recorder did the trick--and setting the BIOS to make my computer check the CD-ROM first before booting from hard disk. Those done, the disk was burned, the computer restarted and three minutes later I was running a Linux desktop. You know, that mythical beast that doesn't exist.

By any standards, this is an impressive achievement. Knoppix does everything you want from a live CD: it doesn't tamper with your existing computer in any way; it doesn't ask difficult questions--in fact, it doesn't ask any questions. It is fantastically well endowed with utilities, games, applications and, well, stuff: rather too much, if anything. Does anyone need eight text editors? On the other hand, everyone needs OpenOffice.org--and there it is. All wrapped up on the KDE desktop, running as sweetly as you like on top of Debian GNU/Linux.

I slipped the CD into another PC. Up popped the penguin and a little flashing cursor, and there it stayed. You don't need to know what happened next, nor that it involved commands like "sudo mii-tool -r" and--yes!--IRQ issues. Much the same thing happened on a third PC, but this time I was ready. Shame it was a completely different problem.

After a long examination, it became clear that Knoppix is a wonder, just no miracle worker. The more your PC diverges from the mainstream, the less likely it is that the Knoppix autoconfiguration magic will work unaided. It doesn't need much help, and the online support is fast and apt, but those of us with peculiarities will have just a little work to do.

How are people using Knoppix? It's a perfect recovery disk: if your hard disk goes down, you can boot up in Knoppix and fix the problem. It makes a fantastic test disk for high street PCs--"Does this run Linux, my good man?" "Errr…. ". "Let's find out!" And it's a superlative taster for those who like the idea of Linux but are still chary of the reality. Make as many copies as you like and give them away--a perfect demonstration of the forces at work that are building Linux' momentum.

It also demonstrates where Linux needs to go next before there really is a granny-friendly version you can shove on a PC and give to your elderly relatives. Printing support, application installation, documentation about how the various software components fit together, sugar-coated diagnostics: these are all things that made me swear by their absence.

But they will be fixed. Knoppix isn't the only live-CD option: there are others, and competition to be the best is hot. Across the board, from big corporations through to your desktop, the time is coming when ditching the Microsoft license is going to be a serious option. At the beginning of 2004, that time looks closer than ever.

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  • Most Recent of 96 Talkback(s)
No Alternatives
There are NOT Open Source alternatives to practically everything on my list. Jose didn't even bother to tell me what they are, so I investigated a few, and found no alternatives. This is one of the bi... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Zuel Posted on: 01/21/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
I've never had so many problems with Linux  toadlife | 01/15/04
Same here  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
I've never had so many problems with Linux  wploger | 01/15/04
i've had problems  ryusen | 01/15/04
RE: I've never had so many problems with Linux  SC-man | 01/15/04
Unsuccessful Installs  bhartman24 | 01/18/04
Me neither  Mark Gist | 01/15/04
I know a sure fire way to lock a linux install  JoeMama_z | 01/15/04
hmm  d_jedi | 01/19/04
No linux zealots located  OhMyGosh | 01/19/04
imagine running XP from a CD  JWatson77 | 01/15/04
Yeah, no doubt  Martin Marvinski | 01/20/04
The light at the end of the tunnel...  Grimm Reaper | 01/15/04
Run XP on a 486?  toadlife | 01/15/04
Not even a walk  Grimm Reaper | 01/15/04
Hmmmm ...  wallyweb@... | 01/15/04
Not quite here yet  Zuel | 01/15/04
Sooo, what MS only software do you need?  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
I'm curious too  el1jones | 01/15/04
for me it's photography  ryusen | 01/15/04
I hear this a lot.  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
never heard of gphoto  ryusen | 01/15/04
If its casual use  nite_w0lf | 01/15/04
what's your definition of casual use?  ryusen | 01/15/04
I require speech recognition  BruceWheelock@... | 01/15/04
So, it may not suit you right now....  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
Believe whatever you wish  BruceWheelock@... | 01/16/04
Belief is not the issue  Jose Jimenez | 01/16/04
Didn't overlook it  BruceWheelock@... | 01/16/04
Not much but a few  NemesisNL | 01/16/04
Software I need that Linux doesn't have  Zuel | 01/16/04
missed the point  mpiep | 01/16/04
More to the point.....  Jose Jimenez | 01/16/04
No Alternatives  Zuel | 01/21/04
I use both MSOffice and Open Office  voska | 01/20/04
my opions...  ryusen | 01/15/04
Issues (mysteries)  SC-man | 01/15/04
I'll tell you some of my problems  Michael Kelly | 01/15/04
details  ryusen | 01/15/04
SuSE, RedHat and probably others have this.  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
nvidia Geforce and FX card  NemesisNL | 01/16/04
yes and no..  Arrg | 01/15/04
already there  JWatson77 | 01/15/04
What problems do you have?  NemesisNL | 01/16/04
OpenOffice is all I use now  bdgordon@... | 01/16/04
Linux is ready for the desktop  realitycheck101 | 01/15/04
Might have some help for you here...  Yen_z | 01/15/04
I smell some Knoppix advertisement here  dg mh | 01/15/04
No, but...  SloooeShflu | 01/15/04
??? Knoppix is free man.  maxo_z | 01/16/04
Not there for who?  Chad_z | 01/15/04
Granny thinks linux is great  br3n | 01/15/04
Linux is great, but I have a dual boot that I  FilledOut | 01/15/04
Oh I don't think so  Loverock Davidson | 01/15/04
Not very entertaining, Davidson.  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
Was it supposed to be?  Loverock Davidson | 01/15/04
Now that's more like it!  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
Now that's more like it!  Loverock Davidson | 01/15/04
gee...  ryusen | 01/15/04
gee...  Loverock Davidson | 01/15/04
which linux?  ryusen | 01/15/04
MUAH-HAH-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA-HA....  Jack-Booted EULA | 01/16/04
What are you.......  Ployd_Farker | 01/15/04
What are you.......  Loverock Davidson | 01/15/04
Try SuSE 9.0  Michael Kelly | 01/15/04
It must be the user  Ployd_Farker | 01/15/04
funny fact about Loverock  ryusen | 01/15/04
Funny fact about ZZ  Loverock Davidson | 01/15/04
ok, maybe i should have been more clear...  ryusen | 01/16/04
Ok...  Loverock Davidson | 01/15/04
rrriiiiigggghhhhtttt  Ployd_Farker | 01/16/04
You are wasting your time...  Patrick Jones | 01/16/04
it's not a waste of time  ryusen | 01/16/04
Loverock's Back  Grimm Reaper | 01/16/04
Healthy discussion  liznix | 01/17/04
Knoppix  tome_sctc | 01/15/04
desktop..sort of. It needs the apps, drivers and PNP.  jimk_z | 01/15/04
Apps maybe but, Drivers and PNP???  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
but will it run with WinBIOS happy (NT)  JWatson77 | 01/15/04
Do you think Intel would lock out Linux?  Jose Jimenez | 01/15/04
DOS isn't ready until Lotus 1.2.3. doesn't run.  maxo_z | 01/16/04
Open Source BIOS  Squawkbox | 01/17/04
re : Do you think Intel would lock out Linux?  JWatson77 | 01/19/04
No problems with Mandrake Linux  egon@... | 01/16/04
How dare you?!?!  No_Ax_to_Grind | 01/16/04
nice contribution  NemesisNL | 01/16/04
You're almost right Bit.  Tim Patterson | 01/20/04
You should do something else.  rildo@... | 01/16/04
what, exactly, was the hardware you used?  scott.marlowe@... | 01/16/04
Suse even auto detects TV cards fine...  sargon_z | 01/19/04
Is this guy for real?  Tim Patterson | 01/20/04
It?s about the FREEDOM of CHOICE  txmarcopolo | 01/20/04
LindowsCD works well  RogerFairmont | 01/20/04
What about Gnoppix?  jelks@... | 01/20/04
How hard can it be?  Uberbot | 01/20/04
Thank goodness for vertical integration...  mlindl | 01/21/04

What do you think?

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