Monday, December 29, 2008

Lunch Hour Report: InstaLinux, AIR 1.5 for Linux and Linux Mint 6

So today I'll be covering InstaLinux, a really neat custom distro building site. Adobe's release of AIR 1.5 on the Linux platform. And a quick guide to setting up smartd I found on Linux Journal.

So, first on to InstaLinux.com. This little tool is probably the neatest thing I've seen in my course of using Linux since Mint started improving upon Ubuntu's already rock solid operating system. InstaLinux.com is a site that I found out about while reading through some magazines at the bookstore the other day while enjoying what will probably be one of my last Gingerbread lattes for the year. It's a site that allows you to pick what distro you want to use, then you can customize what packages you want to be included on the ISO. It's basically what you usually do when you get your distro installed, stripping unused packages and bloat, installing your usual packages and customizing your configuration files, but it does it BEFORE you download the ISO. I highly recommend you at least take a look at it as the concept behind it, if nothing else, is really innovative and if adopted by the distro's themselves could be a very useful tool to have on their sites.

Next I would like to highlight Adobe AIR 1.5. A platform that is going to sort of (or hopefully sort of) turn into the next JRE (but better). AIR allows developers to simplify their development process so that they only have to create one application for one "architecture" (AIR) and Adobe handles the rest of the leg work of making it work cross platform because as long as the host machine has AIR installed, the application will work and only need to be made once, not 2 or 3 times like is often the case today.

Finally I'll hit on Linux Mint 6 briefly. Now, not to say that I think it only deserves "briefly" it certainly is more deserving than that, however, it's about 2 minutes to 4PM and I want to get this article done (it's like a dead week for tech news so finding the articles took most of the time today). However, I digress. Linux Mint is basically a fork of Ubuntu that takes Ubuntu, adds all the nice little packages everyone usually puts in their system, strips out some of the bloatware, configures Gnome a new way and adds a new GUI theme plus a lot, lot more. They just released their next version, version 6 and I'm going to be downloading it today at some point and giving it a test drive, I'll write a review of what I think later today or tomorrow.

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