Edited by BuffaloHELP, 21 August 2005 - 01:49 AM.
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What Is The Smallest Usable Os
Started by melkonianarg, Aug 20 2005 11:03 PM
28 replies to this topic
#3
Posted 21 August 2005 - 10:34 AM
I would like to mention some other small usable operating systems. Here we go:
FloppyFW (http://www.zelow.no/floppyfw/) - FloppyFW is a router with the advanced firewall-capabilities in Linux that fits on one single floppy disc.
GeeXboX (http://www.geexbox.org/)
MoviX (http://movix.sourceforge.net/) - The MoviX project is a series of three different tiny Linux CD distributions containing all the software to boot from a CD and play multimedia files through the MPlayer, the best multimedia player in the Unix world.
FeatherLinux (http://featherlinux.berlios.de/) - Feather Linux is a Linux distribution which runs completely off a CD or a USB pendrive and takes up under 115Mb of space.
Puppy Linux (http://www.goosee.com/puppy/) - 60MB
LNX-BBC (http://www.lnx-bbc.org/) - The LNX-BBC is a mini Linux-distribution, small enough to fit on a CD-ROM that has been cut, pressed, or molded to the size and shape of a business card.
Trinux (http://trinux.sourceforge.net/) - Trinux is a ramdisk-based Linux distribution that boots from a single floppy or CD-ROM, loads it packages from an HTTP/FTP server, a FAT/NTFS/ISO filesystem, or additional floppies.
Cheers!
FloppyFW (http://www.zelow.no/floppyfw/) - FloppyFW is a router with the advanced firewall-capabilities in Linux that fits on one single floppy disc.
GeeXboX (http://www.geexbox.org/)
MoviX (http://movix.sourceforge.net/) - The MoviX project is a series of three different tiny Linux CD distributions containing all the software to boot from a CD and play multimedia files through the MPlayer, the best multimedia player in the Unix world.
FeatherLinux (http://featherlinux.berlios.de/) - Feather Linux is a Linux distribution which runs completely off a CD or a USB pendrive and takes up under 115Mb of space.
Puppy Linux (http://www.goosee.com/puppy/) - 60MB
LNX-BBC (http://www.lnx-bbc.org/) - The LNX-BBC is a mini Linux-distribution, small enough to fit on a CD-ROM that has been cut, pressed, or molded to the size and shape of a business card.
Trinux (http://trinux.sourceforge.net/) - Trinux is a ramdisk-based Linux distribution that boots from a single floppy or CD-ROM, loads it packages from an HTTP/FTP server, a FAT/NTFS/ISO filesystem, or additional floppies.
Cheers!
#4
Posted 21 August 2005 - 02:37 PM
With Knoppix you get a distro that runs off a CD with window managers and everything else.
As for the single Floppy distros the most famous one is Coyote Linux, but you can also get Debian distribustions that fit on one floppy and have advanced features related to Debian such as their package management systems and apt-get
As for the single Floppy distros the most famous one is Coyote Linux, but you can also get Debian distribustions that fit on one floppy and have advanced features related to Debian such as their package management systems and apt-get
#5
Posted 21 August 2005 - 02:44 PM
MS-DOS?
lolz! i think it fits in one diskette a long-time ago.
what i'm interested in knowing is how small can one fit a working version of a windows version (w98/2k/me/xp) in a credit card sized CD.
heard there is a version of it in win98 running under 50MB. will try to search that sometime.
#6
Posted 21 August 2005 - 03:02 PM
serverph, on Aug 21 2005, 02:44 PM, said:
never heard about that... and i'm not sure that's legal... but... if you will find sumfin please share
#7
Posted 21 August 2005 - 03:21 PM
machinamedia, on Aug 21 2005, 11:02 PM, said:
it's not a downloadable ISO, it's something you create yourself, with your own licensed version of windows. so nothing illegal there i suppose, if it's not for distribution, and just for personal use.
#9
Posted 23 August 2005 - 08:36 AM
just a small hint - those OSes from a time long passed should be bootable from 720k-floppies or smaller disks; there was a time when 720k was much and Bill Gates said that 640KB of RAM would be more than necessary for every user... just imagine how fast an OS from those times would run on modern machines, if it boots at all
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