Michael Prokop proudly announced last evening, May 29th, the immediate availability for download of the final and stable release of the grml 2012.05 Debian-based operating system. Dubbed Ponyhof, powered by Linux kernel 3.3.7 and based on Debian Testing (28/05/2012), the grml 2012.05 Linux distribution comes with new features, such as the ability... (read more)
Lars Torben Kremer announced on December 29, the immediate availability for download and testing of the Release Candidate version of the upcoming Snowlinux 4 operating system. Dubbed Glacier, Snowlinux 4 is based on the Debian GNU/Linux 7.0 (Wheezy) operating system and it's powered by Linux kernel 3.5, MATE 1.4, and include... (read more)
The following Linux-based operating systems have been announced last week: Debian 6.0.5, Chakra GNU/Linux 2012.05 and grml 2012.05 RC1. In other news: Google released the Google Chrome 19 web browser and Canonical published various design-related jobs for Ubuntu. Softpedia Linux Blog news includes articles about Linux kernel 3.3.6, Linux kernel 3.4 RC7, Libert&e... (read more)
Lars Torben Kremer has announced this weekend, June 16th, the immediate availability for download and testing of the Release Candidate of the Snowlinux 2 KDE edition operating system.
Dubbed Ice, Snowlinux 2 KDE is based on the Debian 6 (Squeeze) operating system and it is powered by LTS (Long Term Support) Linux kernel 26.32 and KDE So... (read more)
The following Linux-based operating systems have been announced last week: Snowlinux 2 MATE, Fedora 17, grml 2012.05, Clonezilla Live 1.2.12-60, and Linux Mint 13 OEM. Softpedia Linux Blog news includes articles about SME Server 8.0, NetBSD 6.0 Beta 2, SystemRescueCd 2.7.1, Bridge Linux 2012.5, AntiX M12 Pre-Final, Wine 1.5.5, Caixa Mágica 18, gPodder 3.1... (read more)
Now I'm on the oh-my-zsh, but I'm not sure that it is perfect choice. What is the key difference between grml zsh config (github repo) and oh-my-zsh config? In which case should I prefer grml or oh-my-zsh?
We are pleased to announce the birth of the Canterbury distribution. Canterbury is a merge of the efforts of the community distributions formerly known as Debian, Gentoo, Grml, openSUSE and Arch Linux to produce a really unified effort and be able to stand up in a combined effort against proprietary operating systems.
We are pleased to announce the birth of the Canterbury distribution. Canterbury is a merge of the efforts of the community distributions formerly known as Debian, Gentoo, Grml, openSUSE and Arch Linux to produce a really unified effort and be able to stand up in a combined effort against proprietary operating systems.
Introduced by Softpedia at the beginning of October 2012, the first Release Candidate of the upcoming openSUSE 12.2 ARM operating system got a lot of attention from both ARM and openSUSE fans.