CNet really went out of their way

Story: Intel taps student's robot for processor demoTotal Replies: 31
Author Content
gus3

Feb 10, 2010
9:19 AM EDT
to avoid mentioning those poisonous terms "Linux" or "GNU". Can you really tell me this insect-bot has OpenOffice.org and gedit installed?

CNet: Pandering to an ignorant audience, making no effort to correct their misconceptions. (insert snide comment about their parent corp here)
bigg

Feb 10, 2010
9:44 AM EDT
Who is CNet's parent corp? Why am I always the last to know these things?
tuxchick

Feb 10, 2010
10:47 AM EDT
"CNet Networks Inc. is the cnet's mother company which was acquired by CBS interactive (owned by CBS Corporation). Thus, CBS Interactive partly owns Cnet.com." http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Which_corporation_owns_cnet

Huzzah for Real Journalists.

It does say Ubuntu.
gus3

Feb 10, 2010
12:33 PM EDT
And calls it an "open-source operating system." Two fails:

Calling Ubuntu "open source" is becoming a stretch (I'm with PJ@Groklaw).

Linux is the kernel, GNU/Linux is the operating system (as in, a system that operates), and Ubuntu is the distribution. If that kid put all, or even most, of Ubuntu into his embedded system, his instructor should dock him at least 10% for wasting resources.
herzeleid

Feb 10, 2010
3:08 PM EDT
Quoting:If that kid put all, or even most, of Ubuntu into his embedded system, his instructor should dock him at least 10% for wasting resources.
Perhaps a knee-jerk reaction against anything ubuntu is a sign of the times. But I will say that ubuntu server is lean and mean. I installed ubuntu 8.04 LTS on a 9 year old compaq with 256 MB RAM and a 9 GB disk.

After installing ubuntu and setting it up as the primary dns, dhcp, firewall and vpn server for our lan, less than 1 GB of disk was used, and everything ran smoothly and reliably with those resources.. Sure, there are distros that can run in lower resource conditions, but calling ubuntu bloated is stretching things.
tuxchick

Feb 10, 2010
4:05 PM EDT
I'll show you bloated. A default Ubuntu installation is about 2.8 gigabytes, and you get a whole herd of useful applications. I added about a gigabyte more for audio production and photo editing.

Windows 7 on my poor ashamed test PC? 13+ gigs and no productivity apps. I could probably get a gig or two back by removing the crapware, nagware, and trialware.
tuxchick

Feb 10, 2010
4:05 PM EDT
But then comparing anything to Windows is hardly fair.
herzeleid

Feb 10, 2010
4:21 PM EDT
Quoting:But then comparing anything to Windows is hardly fair.
Indeed, microsoft has never been about cool or innovative stuff - just a lot of "me too", backed by an obscenely huge marketing and advertising budget.
gus3

Feb 10, 2010
4:56 PM EDT
They could have sunk their budget into making a quality Windows Vista release, but nooooo, they had to show us Jerry Seinfeld and BillG wiggling their butts...

*shudder*
hkwint

Feb 11, 2010
4:48 AM EDT
Somebody care to explain to those not familiar with the matter about CBS' stand to free software?

Is it that they are hostile, dumb, paid by Microsoft, accidentaly employ incompetent writers, happen to have hired MCSE-robots, believe viewpoints of tech analysts are interesting, are they paid by conservative think tanks, is some Microsoft exec in their board of directors, do they earn from large Microsoft adds, maybe is it anything beyond Microsoft, are they just plain lazy, maybe real journalists don't want to work for CNet or what is it?

After all, I enjoy at least half of their articles I read, but maybe that's just me or something.
gus3

Feb 11, 2010
5:42 AM EDT
CBS hasn't had a reputation for fact-checking since the 2004 US presidential election. That dispute, between Dan Rather and CBS purse-string holders, ended with a court decision that basically told Mr. Rather his wisest move would be to retire into obscurity.

Bear in mind, I didn't know CBS owned CNet as I read the article. It was more a case of the article's bad taste being confirmed by the colophon in the page footer.
hkwint

Feb 11, 2010
10:33 PM EDT
OK, thanks. I seem to remember some things about 2004 elections (too close to call?), but didn't know CBS was involved.
jdixon

Feb 11, 2010
11:50 PM EDT
> I seem to remember some things about 2004 elections (too close to call?),

No, that was the 2000 election. The 2004 election was close, but not that close.

> ...but didn't know CBS was involved.

CBS aired a report concerning George Bush's military service which was later shown to be fraudulent. It was rather obvious as events transpired that Rather let his personal views get in the way of proper journalism, and that he wasn't countermanded by any of his superiors.
hkwint

Feb 12, 2010
2:02 PM EDT
Oh, darnit, those dates; I'm even four years older than I was already afraid of.
softwarejanitor

Feb 12, 2010
4:39 PM EDT
One of these days...

I've been meaning to figure out WHY a base Windows install takes so much disk space and compare what they actually install to what comes in, for example Ubuntu... Surely all that space must be used for SOMETHING? Is it anything anyone actually uses?
bigg

Feb 12, 2010
4:52 PM EDT
> Is it anything anyone actually uses?

The guy 4000 miles away waiting to control your computer.
hkwint

Feb 13, 2010
6:12 PM EDT
SJ: You're not the only one. XP - the last MS OS I used - can be put on a diet, and in fact it's really amazing how much can be left away. Once when partitioning I believed 1,5GB should be enough for XP, but 'out of the box' it isn't. Apply some tricks and it can be done however. LXer is probably not the best place to ask, but let my try to help:

-First there's the 'mempage', called 'swap' in Linux. You can control how big it is, and you can put it on another drive if you want. It can be compared to Linux's swapfile. Depending on its size, you can save about 300M. -Then, there's the 'dll-backup'. There is a large number of dll's that are protected against 'deletion' There's a backup of them in dll-cache. Using any means of bypassing Windows boot, you can delete those. Again, you can save about 200M or something like that. -Same for service pack files: There's a cache of those, which can be deleted as well. -There's some 'Windows File Protection' making sure you cannot delete unused cruft like MS Gaming Zone, Video conversation and stuff like that. Take any LiveCD (Linux?) and you can delete those.

With tools like nLite or BartPE (note: Legality of those is disputed) you can leave out other cruft like IE. When done, it will have the same amount of 'usability' while saving about 30% of HD space.

Ubuntu is probably not a good example of efficiency, it's kind of bloated too in my opinion.
chalbersma

Feb 13, 2010
8:24 PM EDT
Quoting: One of these days...

I've been meaning to figure out WHY a base Windows install takes so much disk space and compare what they actually install to what comes in, for example Ubuntu... Surely all that space must be used for SOMETHING? Is it anything anyone actually uses?


I don't know about XP but from what I hear Vista installs a lot of "extras." Every Vista install installs all the "goodies" that would be included with the Ultimate edition, even if you only have Home Basic. The idea is that if you upgrade you don't have to download the other x gigs of bullshit they just sold you.
gus3

Feb 13, 2010
8:29 PM EDT
Quoting:I don't know about XP but from what I hear Vista installs a lot of "extras."
Including DRM.
chalbersma

Feb 13, 2010
9:41 PM EDT
@gus3

Aye it does.
herzeleid

Feb 13, 2010
11:32 PM EDT
Quoting:Ubuntu is probably not a good example of efficiency, it's kind of bloated too in my opinion.
I installed ubuntu 8.04 LTS server on a 9 year old compaq tower with 256 MB RAM. 450 Mhz CPU and a 9 GB disk drive. After setting it up as the firewall, vpn, dns, dhcp server and smtp relay for our domain, ubuntu was using less than 1 GB disk space, and performance was good. I have no idea how you can call that bloated.
jdixon

Feb 14, 2010
12:42 AM EDT
> First there's the 'mempage', called 'swap' in Linux. You can control how big it is, and you can put it on another drive if you want.

Hmm, I thought the system drive had to have a mimimal swap file on it, of at least 2 MB. Maybe that was only for NT though.
techiem2

Feb 14, 2010
12:51 AM EDT
Technically you can run windows with no swap. However it often doesn't run very well without one, and some applications require a swap to be present.
hkwint

Feb 14, 2010
1:18 PM EDT
Quoting:I have no idea how you can call that bloated.


Just compare compiling a Linux kernel to compiling a MINIX 3 kernel (including core-servers): The latter is done within 8 sec. And I'm pretty sure if you made the same server using NetBSD (or Gentoo maybe?) it wouldn't require 1 GB either. It's all your frame of reference I guess, Ubuntu Server by default gives you lots of extra's you might not need. Moreover, simplicity wasn't one of the design goals of Linux.
herzeleid

Feb 15, 2010
8:39 PM EDT
Quoting:Just compare compiling a Linux kernel to compiling a MINIX 3 kernel (including core-servers): The latter is done within 8 sec.
That's the difference between a microkernel and a macrokernel. I'd expect the tiny little minix kernel to be compiled within seconds.

Quoting: And I'm pretty sure if you made the same server using NetBSD (or Gentoo maybe?) it wouldn't require 1 GB either.
Like I said, you can find distros or OSes than take even less space, but that hardly puts ubuntu on the bloated end of the scale.

Quoting:It's all your frame of reference I guess, Ubuntu Server by default gives you lots of extra's you might not need.
I can't think of anything unneeded in the default ubuntu server install - it's pretty basic, compared to say, Suse, which I ran for years before switching to ubuntu - but let's get practical and compare ubuntu to microsoft windows: No contest.

Quoting:Moreover, simplicity wasn't one of the design goals of Linux.
it is probably as you say - the main goals seem to have been functionality and performance, though ISTR that according to Linus it was all really just for fun.
hkwint

Feb 16, 2010
9:14 AM EDT
Because Ubuntu is less bloated than Windows doesn't make it efficient.

It's just that both the Linux kernel, glibc, gcc and Xorg support a lot, and supporting a lot can be considered bloat by those who like optimizing some piece of software for some particular device.

BTW gcc vs. cc is where the biggest difference between the MINIX / Linux compile times is (gcc can be considered bloated as well, or feature - rich, depending on POV), not micro vs. macrokernel. That's why I mentioned 'core servers' for MINIX as well, but true, since it doesn't have 'modules' to support all kinds of different hardware it also makes a difference.
herzeleid

Feb 16, 2010
3:16 PM EDT
Quoting: Because Ubuntu is less bloated than Windows doesn't make it efficient
I wouldn't have imagined that anyone would try to imply or infer that - but more to the point, ubuntu is less bloated than some other popular linux distros which I've had experience with.

So again, while I never claimed that ubuntu was the most extreme example of leanness and sparseness, it's hardly on the bloated end of the scale - far from it, ubuntu is one of the leaner server installs I've seen. I have to ask, is there an axe to grind here?

Quoting:It's just that both the Linux kernel, glibc, gcc and Xorg support a lot
That's as may be, but keep in mind that there is no xorg in the ubuntu server install - and the kernel is modular, so the drivers are loaded dynamically, as needed. Even if there kernel source contains the code for 42 million device drivers, only the drivers for the 11 devices actually present in your system are loaded.

gus3

Feb 16, 2010
3:39 PM EDT
Quoting:the kernel is modular, so the drivers are loaded dynamically, as needed. Even if there kernel source contains the code for 42 million device drivers, only the drivers for the 11 devices actually present in your system are loaded.
But they still need non-volatile storage, whether that's on a live CD, or the hard drive, or in EEPROM somewhere.

Also, I keep seeing "Ubuntu Server" mentioned. Is that a separate, Ubuntu-derived distro like Kubuntu and EduBuntu, or is it simply an install option for the Ubuntu live CD?

I have assumed that, in the absence of any qualifiers, "Ubuntu" refers just to the desktop version. The CNet article makes no mention of anything other than "Ubuntu."
herzeleid

Feb 16, 2010
6:01 PM EDT
Quoting:I keep seeing "Ubuntu Server" mentioned. Is that a separate, Ubuntu-derived distro like Kubuntu and EduBuntu, or is it simply an install option for the Ubuntu live CD?
Well, it's not a derived distro, but the official canonical product, and not an install option for the ubuntu desktop CD, but a separate CD. If you go to ubuntu.com for download, you can choose 32 or 64 bit, and you can choose desktop or server. Unlike e.g. Suse, where everything comes on 1 giant DVD.

Ubuntu server and desktop, while derived from the same source code, are built differently, and have different package sets. The desktop is oriented towards the desktop experience, while the server is a lean, text-only install. The kernel builds are different as well - AFAIK it's the same source code, but different kernel build options are chosen for server vs desktop.
tmx

Feb 16, 2010
6:40 PM EDT
Personally, I think what Ubuntu should do is when the user install, have a choice for basic or advance installation. In advance mode, it can install dependencies packages, then let the user select which app to be installed.

I always thought it was legal to use nLite as long as you own license copy, but I don't know if the process of stripping stuff down breaks the EULA . Certainly computer shops are has been installing a new copy of Windows to a customer PC, but reuse their product key.

Warning: below are tips about using Windows. If you do not want to use Windows, do not read.

For Windows 7 / Vista, you can do three basic things to immediately gain 2-8gb of free space: -Disable System Restore, since it backup virus as well. -Run Command Prompt as Administer mode and type this to disable hibernation: power -h off *The hibernation file is usually 2-4gb. If you disable hibernation in the GUI menu, it will not delete this file from C: root, the command above will. -If you have 4gb of ram, you can just disable pagefile completely. Some people say this lead to problems, but I never had any problems. Could possibly lead to compatibility issue for some apps, if then just enable some. If you set the minimum and maximum size the same, it system won't waste time resizing the page file.

I am not going to bored you too much more, but there is an instruction and script on how to slim down Windows 7 as well: http://www.msfn.org/board/topic/137765-windows-7-rtm-32-64-b... Though it is inevitable in the future there will be a GUI tool like vLite for 7. I took that script and edit things to made the things actually compatible, since it removed and breaks important features. Also the script allow to mount the registry of the install image and (beside from some very harmful things that can be done in the wrong hand) I can edit the registries to do things like enable desktop icons and disable animations by default.

Anyway, my image ended up installing in 10minutes through USB drive and takes up 2.4gb. Though this do not compare to installing Ubuntu which takes approximately 3minutes.
jdixon

Feb 16, 2010
9:28 PM EDT
> ...I always thought it was legal to use nLite as long as you own license copy...

That's my understanding, yes. There's little doubt Bart'sPE requires an unused license, though I've heard some argue that a concurrent license (i.e., you can use it as your licensed copy if your machine is turned off) is adequate.
hkwint

Feb 17, 2010
4:43 AM EDT
Quoting:ubuntu is less bloated than some other popular linux distros which I've had experience with.


I immediately believe you, apart from Gentoo, a tiny bit of Slackware and the BSD's there's not much else I've had experience with, especially not server distro's. I thought Debian did pretty well too, if you do some kind of 'expert' install like where you can disable anything like some people told me (I'm sorry, but I'm always lost in those menu-driven installs where you have to do some trick to break out of the 'default install').

Nonetheless, the first time I installed OpenBSD (as a desktop user who never saw a server and anything but Windows) all text-only apps were less then 1 MB, so if Ubuntu server fills multiple hundreds of MB's with text only apps, I'm still a bit confused as to where it goes. Probably some cache files, tmp files and Apache or something?

It might have been I was a bit brainwashed after coming out of the presentation of Mr. Tanenbaum (and some other 10KB-kernels) though.

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