lesman escribió:

> 
> Con respecto a Puppy, tiene traducción al español y login multiusuario?
> 

sobre el multiuser que es importante puppy da estas opciones válidas, lo 
que si la PC no tiene CD ni el usuario flash como mi caso...

Multiuser

Puppy is not developed as a multi-user distribution. In contrast to 
other distributions each user has full access to all files, programs and 
personal data. Nevertheless there are some options for multiusers.


How to personalise the pup_save.2fs-file

If several persons work with Puppy, you can assign a pup_save.2fs-file 
to each person. In this way each person can configure Puppy individually 
and store his personal file in his own pup_save.2fs-file.

All pup_save.2fs-files must be in the same directory and must begin with 
"pup_save". For example, if there are two users Julia and Alexander you 
make a copy of the original pup_save.2fs-file first. Then you rename the 
original file as pup_save_Julia.2fsand the copied file as 
pup_save_Alexander.2fs. When starting Puppy askes which 
pup_save.2fs-file to use.


Multisession

Each user can use its own Puppy CD/DVD with his programs and his 
personal files. To do so use the boot option multi-session. Even though 
multi-session is really interesting I am hesitant to save on the same 
CD-/DVD-data medium again and again. I would always be afraid of losing 
my files.


Root

In contrast to most other Linux distributions Puppy does not 
differentiate between a normal user and the administrator root. Rather 
you always works as root, which simplifies the use of Puppy. The 
question arises if it is unsecure to work as root and to have full 
access to all files, programs and data.

For the normal home user, there are no special risks compared to other 
Linux distributions. On the contrary, Puppy is probably a bit safer than 
many other distributions.

First let's analyze the risk of a distribution, which differentiates 
between user and root. The user works as a normal user, who does not 
have privileges to write/delete programs and system files. An intruder 
can compromise only the user’s files. However the intruder has an 
entrance to the system and can try to gain root-privileges (find the 
password file, use exploits to transfer malware code and so on), and 
afterwards try to get access to all files.

As long as Puppy starts from CD-ROM (and is not installed on the 
harddrive) the program-files and system-files are secure. Everytime you 
reboot any malware programs, which an intruder could have left, are 
gone. Of course your own files stored into the pup_save.3fs-file or on a 
harddrive can be compromised by an intruder, but this can happen to the 
normal user of another Linux-distribution as well. If you want to be 
safe from intrusion, store checksums of all files and backup your files 
regulary.
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