• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: The official Damn Small Linux book : the tiny adaptable Linux that runs on anything
  • Contributor: Shingledecker, Robert [VerfasserIn]; Andrews, John [VerfasserIn]; Negus, Chris [VerfasserIn]
  • imprint: Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, [2008]
  • Published in: Negus live Linux series
  • Issue: [First edition].
  • Extent: 1 online resource (449 pages); illustrations
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9781282670099; 1282670093
  • Keywords: Linux ; Operating systems (Computers) ; Systèmes d'exploitation (Ordinateurs) ; operating systems
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Includes index
  • Description: Damn Small Linux (DSL) started as an exercise by John Andrews to fit an entire desktop computer system into a compressed 50MB image. Within a few years, DSL grew to one of the most popular Linux systems in the world (in the Top Ten, by some accounts) without growing beyond that 50MB target. In a world where desktop systems are bloated with eye candy and many rarely used features, you may wonder what makes this little operating-system-that-could so popular? Well, it could be that people don’t want to throw away a usable computer because the latest Windows system won’t run. It could be that people are tired of waiting for common computer operations to complete while who-knows-what goes on in the background. Or maybe it’s just a love for simplicity and elegance. DSL sets out to include all the basic features you need in a modern desktop computer system—and then makes those features functional, fast, and efficient. As a result, DSL can run well on hardware that is smaller, older, or less powerful than what most of today’s desktop systems demand.