• gramie@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I bought a book that had Yggdrasil in a CD that I used so I didn’t have to go into the university for the Unix labs.

    I think that the entirety of the book, around 1,000 pages, was printed out man pages.

  • buried_treasure@feddit.uk
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    2 months ago

    Looking at that screenshot, even though I’ve been a very happy KDE user for many years now, I do kinda miss the days when many Xfree86 desktop environments were influenced more by NeXTStep than Windows.

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    2 months ago

    Legendary icons for Home and Root.

    I’d kill for a functional DE that looks like this. Currently using Chicago95

  • Drito@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Is it possible to make it working on a today machine ? Even with a virtual machine ? Sorry for my ignorance.

    • LeFantome@programming.dev
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      2 months ago

      It should work fine in a virtual machine. Just make sure you provide suitably ancient hardware like IDE storage and old ethernet cards. On something that old, I would only provide a single CPU. To be safe, I would also try installing with a low amount of RAM and then increase it later. Older kernels could not handle multi-processor or RAM above a certain size. I think I might start with 700 MB of RAM to do the install. That might sound like nothing but it probably runs in 8.

      It is easy today in our era of resource richness to forget just how meager the hardware was when these distros were new.

      A distro that old is going to require some fiddling to get XFree86 ( x11 ) up and running. It should be ok in a desktop VM but I have had problems with older versions of X in Proxmox in case you are using that.

      I kind of want to go install this myself now. Or an old version of SLS ( pre-cursor to Slackware ). I ran them both at some point in my Linux journey but it has been a while.

      What I really want to do is to make OCI containers from these old distros and try to run them in Distrobox on top of a modern kernel. Has somebody done that already? Really old versions of Red Hat ( not RHEL, Red Hat, < 6 ) would be cool too.