langue originale : français
dernière mise-à-jour: 09/09/2001
Welcome to DemoLinux 3.0.
Among various other improvements, version 3.0 now introduces the Xvesa X server, remplacing the framebuffer used before, which depended on VESA 2.0 cards. We now handle PCI sound cards, Lucent winmodems, Reiserfs version 3.5.x, certain USB peripherals and several other 2.2.18 kernel devices. As for version 2.0, DemoLinux 3 heavily uses a transparent compression schema that allows to sotre over a gigabyte of applications, including GNOME and KDE and the StarOffice office suite. The compression code has been fixed and now it is faster and more reliable. The list of installed packages is here. Notice this time we included highly demanded tools like ssh (which is downloaded on the fly and not pre-installed, due to legal reasons), gpart, dump etc, as well as a version of TeXmacs.Install Linux in 3 clics !
You can now try to install DemoLinux 3 on your hard disk.
Be sure you have an empty hard disk (or disk partition) at hand, and click on
the install icon on the root desktop.
You will get a basic Linux installation, almost identical to the one you would
get after a regular Debian install (but on one single partition, with a swap file
instead of a swap partition, and a floppy based boot).
All configuration done by DemoLinux should be still present after the install, so
you should have nothing to do. To configue additional peripherals, just use the
usual tools of the Debian distribution.
Notice, though, that very few people tested this functionality, so we only recommend it to experts, for the time being.
Known Bugs
If you know how to fix one of the following problems, please tell us!
DemoLinux 3.0 patches the kernel to add a boot splash screen (this is not LPP, which seems to depend on VESA 2.0 compliant cards). Unfortunately, we came across at least one machine with a broken bios (a version of the HP OmniBook XE2) that has bad interactions with the patch. Your help is welcome in adding a "nologo" kernel command line option to disable at run time the splash screen patch.
Booting from inside Windows only works if the CD-Rom reader is properly configured under DOS (not gonna happen that often). The simple workaraound (adopted by Mandrake, for example) would be to copy on the Windows hard disk the files needed to bo