Tiny Linux Hits the Streets
Puppy 3.0 can be run direct from a CD, without installing to a hard disk.
Tom Jowitt, Techworld

Wednesday, October 03, 2007 1:00 PM PDT

A very small Linux operating system, known as Puppy Linux, has had a "major 
upgrade" after version 3.0 hit the streets this week.

What makes Puppy Linux different from other distributions 
f Linux is that the Puppy 3.0 Live CD can be run direct from the CD, without 
installing to a
hard disk. Indeed, the operating system is just 97.6MB in size.

Puppy is designed to be a very small Linux operating system designed to be 
"reliable, easy to use and fully featured." The entire operating system and all
the applications can be run entirely from RAM. It comes with applications such 
as SeaMonkey/Mozilla Application Suite, AbiWord, Sodipodi, Gnumeric, and
Gxine/xine.

One of its most compelling features is that users can boot from the disk, work, 
and then save their files back to CD for the next time they boot the CD.
It can also be run from USB storage sticks or Zip disks. This allows the Puppy 
operating system to be used on older computers, or as an emergency rescue
system, a Linux demonstration system, or as a complete general purpose 
operating system.

According to developer 
Barry Kauler
, Puppy Linux 3.0 is a major upgrade over previous releases. One of the major 
changes in this release is a move to make Puppy Linux and Slackware compatible
to allow users to install Slackware packages on Puppy. Slackware is one of the 
oldest Linux distributions, and aims to be the most Unix-like Linux 
distribution.

"To that end, I used all the building block packages from Slackware 12, such as 
glibc 2.5, gcc 4.1.2 and gtk 2.10.13," said developer Kauler. "Most of the
libraries in Puppy are now from Slackware. Note, though, this does not in any 
way make Puppy a clone of Slackware - apart from aiming for binary 
compatibility,
Puppy is fundamentally unique from the foundations upward."

Kauler has also "totally rewritten the key scripts that control how Puppy boots 
up, is configured, and shuts down." Other changes include better USB writing
method, after "finally getting periodic flushing of RAM to Flash drive working 
properly - this is part of a mechanism that constrains writes to Flash drives
so that they don't burn out."

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,138030-pg,1/article.html

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