[moved to debian-user, as the question originated there] On Jul 30, Philippe Troin wrote : This was posted to debian-user. We have to help this English magazine !
Don't get me wrong. I'd like to spread the word (and the code), but I think there are quite a few problems with what is requested. > ------- Forwarded Message > The UK Unix Group want to promote Linux on the front cover CD of PC > magazines. We think the following would be useful > > - -A distribution that made sense in 100MB monthly parcels. (we can only > squeeze a small amount of space from the huge amount of Windows SW that > gets put on) I don't think Debian makes sense this way. It would take six isssues to distribute just the stuff in the binary CD of the official CD set (and it might make sense to distribute as much as possible of contrib, non-free and non-US). You'd also have to order the packages in a sensible way (packages in issue n must not depend on packages not in issues 1..n), which might be difficult. > - -Does not need RockRidge IIRC, RockRidge only adds Unix filesystems semantics to ISO 9660. There is nothing in the install which depends on this AFAICT. > - -Would work on FAT, VFAT and FAT32 filesystems in a umsdos manner. Have umsdos and VFAT been combined in 2.1 kernels? FAT32 support isn't even in 2.1 right now. > - -With a fips that worked with the new FAT32. I'm not aware of a version of FIPS (or another freeware (re)partitioning tool) that supports FAT32. BTW, isn't this a bit duplicated? If you have umsdos for (V)FAT(32), you don't need to repartition; if you have a FAT32-capable FIPS-like tool, you don't need umsdos for (V)FAT(32). Personally, if I wanted to promote Linux through windows-oriented magazines, I'd try to persuade them to put it on an "extra issue" CD, or start by distributing the GNU for WIN32 stuff, and have articles explaining "there's more where that came from". Ray -- LEADERSHIP A form of self-preservation exhibited by people with auto- destructive imaginations in order to ensure that when it comes to the crunch it'll be someone else's bones which go crack and not their own. - The Hipcrime Vocab by Chad C. Mulligan -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .