|
CrunchBang Linux 10 "Alpha 1" Released, Ditches Ubuntu Posted: 19 Mar 2010 08:52 PM PDT ![]() As some of you may know, CrunchBang Linux has become one of the most popular flavors of Ubuntu by featuring out of the box light-weight Openbox window manager and GTK+ applications on top of a minimal Ubuntu system. It is also considered as one of the simplest and refined Ubuntu-based distributions out there. CrunchBang Linux 10 "Alpha 1" is now available in two main versions: Openbox and Xfce. Both editions have the same line-up of applications, and the recently added Xfce edition has had its session set-up similar to that of previous CrunchBang Openbox sessions. From the release notes, here are some of the other changes: * Now uses a customised Debian text installer, available from the LiveCD boot menu. * Now available with either a default Openbox or Xfce4 session. The new Xfce offering has been designed to mimic the original CrunchBang Openbox experience, i.e. a minimal desktop with right-click system menu and predefined shortcut keys for popular applications and commands. * Available for 32 bit and 64 bit architectures, with the 32 bit offering available in i486 and i686 optimised kernel flavours. * Now includes a minimal set of pre-installed applications. The application line-up will be revised over future releases. ![]() If you want to test drive CrunchBang Linux 10 "Alpha 1", you can download it from HERE. So how did the fans and users of CrunchBang react to this Ubuntu-to-Debian switch? Did it make them feel grouchy like Statler perhaps? I visited the #! Forum and noticed that most community members didn't seem to mind the change. After all, Ubuntu is based on Debian GNU/Linux hence no big deal I guess. |
You are subscribed to email updates from TechSource To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |
No comments:
Post a Comment