GNU/Linux bootable CD on XBOX: dyne:bolic 261
jaromil writes "The dyne:bolic bootable CD distribution is almost getting to its final 1.0 release, includes a whole bunch of multimedia applications making it easy to edit and stream audio and video, encrypt mails, share p2p and of course play games, all with a fancy GNUStep desktop. download the 1.0 alpha 5 ISO (~350Mb) and try it on your PC or XBOX!" One more reason to mod an xbox.
best of both worlds? (Score:5, Interesting)
Mike
Re: work with 007 hack (Score:3, Informative)
there is already a new savegame exploit for the M$-game MechAussault, that also updates the xbox-live runtime. perhaps the dashboard is exploitable too & linux gets _independent_ from a modchip or hardware modifications.
Re: work with 007 hack (Score:2)
I just checked XBoxHacker [xboxhacker.net] but there's no reference to it there that I could find. (I don't check the latest XBox hacking new very often, so that's why I only know of one site to check.) Do you have any references to the new exploit?
Re: work with 007 hack (Score:2, Informative)
Re:best of both worlds? (Score:2)
I'd like to see one of 2 options for this kind of thing:
1. Tell the system to "boot" from the CD after a brief pause after the game is shut down. Not sure if this is possible.
2. Tell the system where to mount from using an image on the network - TFT, SAMBA, NFS, whatever...
I have yet to see something like that.
FIRST POST!!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Just in case they figured out how to foil current mod chips this time. I still would prefer to use my Xbox for online gaming *gasp* than as a Linux box.
Heres some ideas (Score:5, Interesting)
Second, if its done right people might use Xbox Linux, if its useful, it depends on how its done. Overall though I'd use it to promote Linux, as a marketing technique.
Linux needs marketing, so that when the time comes a year or two from now, when Longhorn is released, Linux can take the market or at least be competitive, people have to actually know what Linux is though, as of right now people either dont know what it is, or they believe a bunch of myths about it being a hackerOS.
Re:Heres some ideas (Score:2)
I don't think XBox support is going to win over many people. Linux IS popular now as a sever platform (Redhat's survival in the market place is a testament to this).
Sounds like you need GNUBox (Score:3, Funny)
GNUBox version 0.14af2_1-1 is now available, and comprises of a blank sheet of mylar with a single -12v DC power line and a ground trace. We expect the hardware to be completed at around the same time as t
Re:Sounds like you need GNUBox (Score:2)
well, kiddie (Score:2)
I mean choice isnt important as long as it works just use it right??RIGHT?
Re:Heres some ideas (Score:5, Funny)
You must be new here.
Re:Heres some ideas (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Heres some ideas (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Heres some ideas (Score:2)
RAM, output, and interface limitations? Do you really want to run Quake in swap mode on a 720 by 480 interlaced screen with an XBOX controller?
Re:FIRST POST!!!! (Score:3, Informative)
missing the point (Score:3, Interesting)
From the Dyne:bolic User's Guide:
I'm not a big gamer, but with this
And just IMAGINE (Score:5, Funny)
It's quite invigorating browsing interactive pr0n with the Xbox controls.
sweeeeeeeeeeet.
Re:And just IMAGINE (Score:2)
For your girl... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For your girl... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For your girl... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:And just IMAGINE (Score:2, Interesting)
I saw a gamecube controller at gamestop last night that has a fan/ventilation holes in it to keep your hands cool. You might try finding one for your xbox to keep your hands cool/dry.
To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:3, Interesting)
These new live CDs finally give us the chance to introduce Linux to the masses. Recently I emailed dozens of my friends, and I will attempt to introduce them to Linux in a way thats safe, with these new CDs you dont have to actually install Linux, It also gives us the ability to introduce Linux to the gamers. So the question here is how many of you people have actually used this to show people Linux? I wish we had a Redhat live-CD, or Mandrake because those are my favorite brand, but a Lindows promotion CD(Thats what I will start calling these CDs) should be given away in stores and to college students.
How about a grass roots program? I plan to do something like that. I hope through these new live-CDs that it can act as a type of marketing where people who are interested in Linux can try it without actually installing it. The easy way to get them to try it is to give it to them for their Xbox game console, a Console with no OS such as the Xbox would actually be perfect for the gamer who wants to do more than just play games on their Xbox. I also wonder if something like this could be brought to work or run on computer labs in college campuses, I havent tried it so I dont know. But yes, I have ideas for marketing.
People are going to read this and think i'm some kinda Linux zealot, but the truth is the best thing we can do for the computer industry right now is create competition, Linux is competition, competition fuels growth.
So all who are with me, please post a reply/response about how you plan to actually use these live CDs for marketing purposes, perhaps it would be wise to put these live CDs in some videogame magazine if possible, or even get Linux to run on the PS2.
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:5, Interesting)
By contrast the Xbox may not have a 128 bit processor, but it does have a 733MHz one, and it has 64MB of ram, which is still well on the lean side but more than twice as useful as the 32MB in the PS2. In the $130 price for a used console plus another $30 for a memory card with a serial interface, you can hack that mofo and have what ends up being a much more open system than the PS2. That might not be intentional, but it's still more useful.
The only edge PS2 linux has over Xbox linux is the lack of a need for hacking, but it's still cheaper to buy a hacked Xbox than it is to buy a PS2 with the Linux kit.
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
Mod Chip? (Score:5, Informative)
Um...you DO realize they have to mod the box first, right? Your friends are all handy with a soldering iron, I take it?
Re:Mod Chip? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Mod Chip? (Score:2)
All right. Still requires acquiring the chip and cracking the case, so the effect is still the same - it isn't trivial for someone who's afraid of mucking their system.
Knoppix (Score:2)
And with KNOPPIX you don't need an X-BOX, which are still manufactured by our evil arch enemy Microsoft, as far as I remember.
I'm waiting for the Redhat/Lindows live CD. (Score:2, Insightful)
Knoppix is good, but we need some live CDs based on Redhat. We need Redhat Linux because its the most stable and easiest to use. If I am going to introduce someone to Linux, the options would be Mandrake, Redhat, Lindows, but never Debian or Slackware.
But until the Redhat/Mandrake live CD promotion kit is released, I will use Knoppix.
Re:I'm waiting for the Redhat/Lindows live CD. (Score:2)
But never Debian? Am I missing something, here?
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:3, Funny)
No it has to be more personal than that. (Score:2)
Although it could indeed work, It worked for AOL, I'd prefer a grass roots movement occur in the same manner people convinced management to use Linux as a server, people have to now convince the average person to use Linux on the desktop.
Once Linux is competitive in all markets, can we finally be happy, when I can buy a PC and the vendor asks "Would you like Linux or Windows on your PC?" Then I will be satisfied.
Thats why I said focus on smart people first. (Score:2)
You dont go to the old folks home and teach grandma to use Linux first. What you do is you teach her grand daughter in college to use Linux, you know the one going to Stanford. You teach the college students Linux first, showing them how it benefits them such as not having worry about crashing, no more losing their work, no fear of viruses, more difficult for hackers to steal all their information.
You see, college students are critical thinkers, they do or use whats best to accomplish their goals, they wo
Re:Thats why I said focus on smart people first. (Score:2)
Um, no, XP still kicks KDE's butt from the "I've never used a computer before" point of view. Problem number one is that too many choices come up when you go to run programs. Worse, a lot of them begin with K. KOffice. Killustrator. Kedit. Konqueror. Etc. I'm familiar with how a computer works and I had a terrible time learning what the various apps do. Painful.
Problem #2 is that s
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
Like, oh, I dunno, computers?
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:3, Insightful)
The goal is to build mindshare, you cannot get people to try Linux on their mission critical desktop PCs unless they trust you, truely trust you.
You can however get a stranger to run a CD on their gaming console, people dont have to trust you for that. The goal is to get the average person to know Linux exists, once they know it exists then you can market Linux to these peoples PCs.
Actually I'd do it in this order, consoles, college campuses(laptops), computer labs, and finally desktop PCs.
People after
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
And I think you're order is wrong. I work for a college IT department so I have a decent idea of how this stuff works.Basically if it doesn't look like the computer in their rooms, the students bitch. So you can't just put Linux on the lab machines (no matter how it'll be better in the long run).
Not true (Score:2)
First, we can make Linux look like the computers in their room, check out Lycoris Linux http://www.lycoris.com/ [lycoris.com]
See it looks like Windows. What you dont understand(I am a college student), is that college students dont care how it looks, they care how it functions, if the function is close enough to Windows they wont even notice the differences.
Lindows with ClickNRun functions just like Windows, installing programs is easy, etc, perhaps if we set up a Linux distro which made applications easy to install,
Re:Not true (Score:2, Informative)
What are you smoking, and can I get some?
XP runs on FAT32 as well as NTFS; it also has a filesystem conversion program to (transparently) convert FAT32 (or FAT16, I suppose, but I don't know anyone who still uses it).
I've upgraded a half-dozen Win98 systems to XP, and every last one of them can access their old files.
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
I believe that's why Knoppix [knoppix.net] was created -- so you could pop in the CD, reboot, and have a Linux desktop to play around with, without having to install/partition/nonsense.
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:5, Informative)
Buy a Bootable Business Card from the Electronic Frontier Foundation's Shop [eff.org]! You get to spread the word of Linux while sending $5 towards a wonderful cause!
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
Thats nice but I'd prefer a Redhat version. I want something easy to use and configure when I show people Linux or use it myself.
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:4, Insightful)
*Cough*karmawhore*cough*
Sorry, this is not going to get Linux out to the masses.
1.) Playing around with the XBOX on a fuzzy TV is not going to impress people to the point of installing a new OS.
2.) If they've got an XBOX, they're likely a gamer. They're not going to dump Windows for Linux. Bad audience to target.
3.) More people have PCs than XBOXs, so why target a niche product anyway?
" Recently I emailed dozens of my friends, and I will attempt to introduce them to Linux in a way thats safe, with these new CDs you dont have to actually install Linux."
I have a better idea, use Knoppix [knoppix.org]. (Slashdot also recently had an article about Knoppix MAME which comes with MAME...) You burn an ISO, leave the Knoppix CD you just burned in your drive, reboot computer, wait for a minute and Linux comes up. No fuss. No installation. Completely useful.
Here's the best part: Knoppix can access NTFS. So, the big bonus here is that if anybody ever fries their Windows system, they can just pop this disc in and get back to their files. Heck, if they really feel like tinkering with it, it's like having their workstation on a CD. Bitchin.
"People are going to read this and think i'm some kinda Linux zealot...."
Actually, I was thinking karma whore.
"... or even get Linux to run on the PS2."
It's there, but it's not free.
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
uh no, most people have CD burners, for the ones who dont, I'll show them in person.
My point is this makes it much much easier to convert Windows users to Linux, I remember when it would take weeks of debating with them to get them to even try Mandrake.
Olli (Score:2)
Heres an Idea, how about we market a Linux distro specifically for gamers?
Perhaps something like you mention, counterstrike, quake3, or other games, run some tests, see if we can get these games running at a higher frame rate than the Windows versions, and market it that way.
Re:To all Linux supporters, This is our chance. (Score:2)
Thats not true, Millions of people pirated Dreamcast games and PSX games, MILLIONS, and most of these so called hardcore gamers didnt mod these systems themselves, in fact most of these people dont even know how to operate a computer because these guys are gamers, not programmers.
So yes you'd be marketing to a crowd who is open minded to new technology, but I dont think they already know about Linux unless they are the ones modding and cracking the software themselves, most who run a modded system arent.
and in related news... (Score:5, Funny)
only if they had included dav_fs (Score:2)
Direction wrong, please try again. (Score:5, Insightful)
If you build it, they will come, etc, etc.
Same can be said for hardware manufacturers. Some working CMPCI drivers would kick ass too.
Tom
Re:Direction wrong, please try again. (Score:2)
Re:No network, no FMV (Score:2)
Re:Direction wrong, please try again. (Score:2)
That ignores the larger issue of hardware compatibility. The video game manufacturer would have to make sure they shipped with working drivers on the CD for all possible hardware platforms that they're going to support. Furthermore, those drivers would have to be high enough quality to give gaming-level performance out of the hardware.
"windows users are USED to rebooting"
Windows users are used to rebooting
xine on the Xbox? (Score:5, Interesting)
"without the need for the remote" (Score:2)
IT truly sounds better than "Goddam DVDX2 !!! Doesn't accept Remote Control !!!"
And now, all of a sudden, it's not a bug. It's a feature 8)
For everything else there's... (Score:5, Funny)
Mod Chip: $30.00
CD to burn the latest distro to: $0.20
Using the above system to call MicroSoft Tech Support via VoIP to complain about how bad KDE looks on a 20" black-and-white TV: PRICELESS.
-JT
Re:For everything else there's... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:For everything else there's... (Score:2)
Let's get this out of the way. (Score:5, Funny)
You: They lose money on all of their systems.
Me: Even if they lose money that doesn't mean that they sell them for below variable cost. You are just helping recover fixed cost.
You: I don't understand your fancy moon language!
Me: Why not get a Lindows computer?
You: The X-Box has better hardware!
Me: It has like 48 megs of ram.
You: It has a nice graphics card!
Me: Fine, it has a nice graphics card.
Re:Let's get this out of the way. (Score:2, Insightful)
Because I can't play Halo on Lindows.
Re:Let's get this out of the way. (Score:2)
Re:Let's get this out of the way. (Score:2)
Re:Let's get this out of the way. (Score:2)
Try to find a way to get component video output from your PC for less than $200. I bet you can't.
I'll take you up on that bet (Score:2)
You lose.
Re:I'll take you up on that bet (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I'll take you up on that bet (Score:2)
Sounds Good (Score:2, Interesting)
Over the past few months, I've been working towards getting a server up and running on my university network to provide streaming videos of club activities and music from uni-bands.
The hard part has been scrounging up bits and pieces to create a half-decent server for all this as the Clubs & Societies deperatment of our Student Union has been rather tight-fisted. A cheap x-box preloaded with this software would be perfectly within budget.
Now to convince the less practical members of the committee to d
wtf? Mpeg encoder and video-in recorder? (Score:5, Insightful)
Similiarly, there is no audio-in for the sound recorders.
And Blender is a nightmare of a gui in the first place, even when you've got a keyboard and mouse...
At the end of the day, an Xbox version of KnoppixMAME would probably be more useful, I feel. Still, its an interesting experiment.
Re:wtf? Mpeg encoder and video-in recorder? (Score:2)
Re:wtf? Mpeg encoder and video-in recorder? (Score:3, Informative)
Any
Re:wtf? Mpeg encoder and video-in recorder? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:wtf? Mpeg encoder and video-in recorder? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:wtf? Mpeg encoder and video-in recorder? (Score:2)
Microsoft announced a DVD and Microphone package, with which you can do karaoke.
That would be impossible if the XBox hadn't audio in.
Re:wtf? Mpeg encoder and video-in recorder? (Score:2)
Both MythTV and Freevo are moving toward a client/server architecture, so some boxes on the system record, some record and play, and some only play. I imagine if you've spent a few hundred dollars on a well specced server/recorder/encoder, and Xbox would make a handy playback only device to sit on the network.
Why the name dyne:bolic? (Score:3, Interesting)
Answer about dyne (Score:3, Informative)
One dyne is the force required to cause a mass of one gram to accelerate at a rate of one centimeter per second squared in the absence of other force-producing effects; A dyne is 100.000 times a newton.
It's a concept defined by Heraclitus, a greek philosopher born at Ephesus around 540 B.C., which once also said that "much learning does not teach understanding".
Panta rei.
go x-box! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:go x-box! (Score:2)
What? (Score:2, Informative)
Window Maker a GNUstep desktop does not make, I'm afraid.
own xbox distribution? (Score:2, Interesting)
Still the question: Why? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've gotten a few vague answers, ranging from "it has a good graphics card, I can now do all that rendering I've been waiting to do!" to "Don't tell me how to use my hardware, you sancimonious pro-Microsoft clone!"
I still ask: Why? Oh, yeah, there's that giddy little thrill of 'subverting' a Microsoft platform to run Linux, but you have to have actually purchased an Xbox to begin with, so you've already put money in Microsoft's coffers. With all the effort needed to get an Xbox to run Linux, there's tons of easier platforms so you fire up EMACS and check your email.
Once you done it, what are you going to do with it? Compartively speaking, apart from the graphics controller, it's not that good of a computing platform.
Re:Still the question: Why? (Score:2, Informative)
Well, here's an idea: because I own one, and I'd like to fuck around with it, just for fun.
Surprisingly, some people actually buy the Xbox because they like the games for it. I for one wouldn't spend the exact same money on a PS2 that doesn't come with a hard drive or space for more than two controllers. And I've been a Bungie games fan for almost forever and now the Xbox is the only way to play them.
So, since I have the thing, why not
Re:Still the question: Why? (Score:2)
I'm afraid any answer you receive will seem just as trivial and nonsensical as the ones you've already quoted.
(or, to take the urban legend Philosophy exam answer: Why Not.)
Re:Still the question: Why? (Score:2)
Microsoft has several billion in cash (40 billion+ from what I heard) in its war chest. Do you think the number of Slashdotters who buy Xboxes without games are making the slightest difference in the overall picture? How many actually bought an Xbox and never bought a game for one? I'm sure there's a couple who have HALO or Ghost Recon stashed away in the bottom of their closets whenever their fell
Re:Still the question: Why? (Score:2)
"Still no cure for cancer"
I still fail to see why this causes so much titter among the people here.
Which pill would I take? One that led to a more worthwhile result. Now excuse me, I'm going to pop Ghost Recon into my unmodded Xbox and shoot some bad guys.
Why is there a need to mod the XBox? (Score:2)
For the ones among us who do not have an XBox; why should the XBox be modded anyway? Once the CD is inserted and binaries run off it, Linux should just feel easy in an x86 surrounding and take on all the interrupts and memory ranges like in a PC but without a BIOS. Ive heard of Linux running on x86 System-on-chips with no BIOS (therefore not PC compatible).
Or is it that the most privileged level in the CPU belongs to a small program that makes SURE Linux is not running, yet doesnt give a performance hit
Re:Why is there a need to mod the XBox? (Score:2)
Modding your Xbox basically replaces the BIOS with one that will allow it. And no, there's no way to bypass the BIOS on an Xbox (least not that I've heard of), the machine is hardwired to boot that first - like every other PC out there.
Good Xbox hacking book: "% Hacking the Xbox" (Score:2)
Check it out!
Bunnie's website [hackingthexbox.com]
I have no affiliation with it blah,blah etc
Hedley
Re:Another Live-CD (Score:4, Insightful)
It could also be useful if you do contracting of any sort and would like to work on linux instead of you-know-what (you'd need a USB pen drive or the like for your data).
Re:Another Live-CD (Score:2)
What a bunch of cockmunching lamers.
Practical everyday use (Score:2)
2) Connect laptop to office network
3) Rip rental DVD
4) Begin distributed divx compression
5) Smoke a cigarette
6) Burn DivX CD
7) Go home
Re:DVD playback? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Icons stolen from KDE? (Score:2)
Other people's work wants to be free! Stop giving these guys a hard time for "sharing" those icons!
And why not? (Score:3, Interesting)
Note that this use (running a Linux distro) in particular has nothing to do with "stealing" as in running illegally copied games. I'm not going to debate whether playing illegally copied games should be called stealing, just pointing out that it's not part of running Linux on an Xbox
The reason I bought an Xbox (and am shopping* for a mod-chip) is to use it as a music box for my car. That may sound silly to you (and it m
Re:And why not? (Score:2)
I'm not going to say it's "silly", but there is much more appropriate hardware for that purpose than the XBox. You'll be working with a sub-obtimal NTSC signal instead of nice clean >VGA. You've also got to mod the XBox to run off 12VDC (or deal with a kludgy inverter).
Out of curiousity - why did you choose the XBox?
I'm sure you already found it, but others interested in doing similar things should take a serious look at http://mini-i [mini-itx.com]
Re:fancy (Score:2)
And as frameworks go, GNUstep is *very* fancy. Oh, and the GUI libraries are theme-able as well--so you can make it look any way you want. There's a Mac-style menu theme, an updated NeXT-ish theme, and I've seen some screenshots of OS X themes.