Google Unveils Chrome Source Code and Linux port Sun, 07 Sep 2008 00:01:02 -0000 ars Technica: "In conjunction with the release, Google has also launched Chromium, an open-source software project that enables third-party developers to study, modify, extend, and redistribute the underlying source code of the Chrome browser." Selling GNU/Linux in a Box Sat, 06 Sep 2008 20:01:39 -0000 Linux.com: "Eight years ago, computer stores stocked a choice of GNU/Linux distributions -- established ones like Caldera, Red Hat, and SUSE, and newcomers like Corel, Progeny, and Stormix. Now, only Ubuntu and openSUSE offer box sets, and both face challenges that other distributions found unsolvable..." 10 Open Source Companies to Watch Sat, 06 Sep 2008 19:01:39 -0000 Network World: "The decision is no longer a question of open source, but about what product is best at solving computing problems regardless of how it was built." Centralized Access With iSCSI Wraps it up: Open Source SANs, part 4 Sat, 06 Sep 2008 18:01:39 -0000 Search Enterprise Linux: "If you've read the three previous parts of this tip, you should now have two servers running and a Distributed Replicated Block Device (DRBD) available between them. The iSCSI target service will draw the two servers and DRBD together to create a fully functional SAN." Adding Heartbeat to Your Open Source SAN: Open Source SANs, part 3 Sat, 06 Sep 2008 17:01:39 -0000 Search Enterprise Linux: "Heartbeat is a monitoring tool that will help you to make the most of your SAN by catching problems before they interfere with your productivity. Part three of this four-part tip shows you how to install a Heartbeat cluster in an open source SAN." Setting up DRBD in an Open Source SAN: Open Source SANs, part 2 Sat, 06 Sep 2008 16:01:39 -0000 Search Enterprise Linux: "As we established in part one of this series on open storage area networks (SANs), building an open source SAN provides a cost-effective alternative for companies with a tight budget. Now that we've established the merits and some of the important considerations in creating open source SANs, we'll explain how to set up the Distributed Replicated Block Device (DRBD) service, which allows for replicated storage in a SAN."
LoopLinux - Small Linux OS distribution that can install and run on DOS/Win systems: DR-DOS, MS-DOS, PC-DOS, PTS-DOS, DOS mode Win95/98. No need to repartition, it is only a file on the disk, and acts like it is on its own partition. Not a UMS-DOS system, but a loop system using standard Linux ext2 filesystem.
Monkey: Mini Linux - Can be extracted to DOS filesystem, and FAT32 too. Full small ELF distribution with latest kernel on 5 diskettes. Can run on this minimal HW: 386SX, 4MB RAM, 30MB on IDE HDD. Contains X Windows for any SVGA videocard, support for: network, 3C5x9, 3c59x, 3c900, NE2000/NE1000, WD80x3 ethernet cards, ATAPI/MITSUMI CD.
University Linux - A small, full-featured Linux distribution that installs easily on a DOS or Win9x PC without partitioning the hard drive. Includes webserver, FTP and Telnet servers as well as Perl and complete tutorials.
Unofficial Monkey Linux Web Site - Documents use of the UMSDOS-based Monkey Linux mini-distribution.
Meta Description: [ Official Unofficial Monkey Linux Web Site. Monkey is
a mini-Linux that extracts on top of DOS or Windows.
There's no need to (re)partition your hard drive! ]
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