Ubuntu

These weren't official, they were CD-Rs put together by an outfit called CheapBytes. Certainly writing a floppy or three using files off the disc was part of the install procedure, but I can't remember the details.

Pete

kernel, boot and driver I think :) then much mucking about to get the install finished at which point you had to spend a week deciding between FVWM, IceWM and the various others before settling down to any kind of work :) Of course in those days work would pretty much have to have been something terminal based or coding based due to the shocking lack of software :)
 
kernel, boot and driver I think :)

Yep, that rings a bell.

Of course in those days work would pretty much have to have been something terminal based or coding based due to the shocking lack of software :)

Ah, well, since I was a sixth-former in my bedroom at that point there was no actual work involved :). I never did get past the point of fiddling, configuring, and installing things. I remember spending a lot of time trying to get a two-machine coax network working across the room to a prehistoric Zenith 8086 with 5 1/4" floppies, PC-DOS, and GEM.

Pete
 
I'd like to try Chrome, but only Chrome OS is available AFAIK?Supposedly not the same item?Do I err?
There is Google Chrome, which is a browser, Chrome OS, which is an operating system, the Chrome Book (and Chrome Box) which is a computer based on Chrome OS. You can run the Chrome browser in several operating systems, including Linux.

There is also Chromium - which is the open source version of the Chrome browser.
 
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