| |
|
Absolute desktop - Think Linux background on the Absoblueski theme
What is Absolute?
Absolute is a customized Slackware distribution:
-
Assembled to make installation and maintenance of Slackware easier.
-
It is an easy install (no package selection)
-
kernel build that is set to accept CPUs down to
a Pentium MMX and tuned for desktop performance
You CAN run Absolute on a Pentium 200 with 64 MB of RAM
(although it would be really slow) -- but with a Pentium II or above and at least 128 MB of RAM you can expect
zippy and stable performance
-
Accepts packages made for same Slackware Version, so you can use Slackware software repositories.
Absolute is a desktop-oriented Slackware -- lightweight but stable. Secure, in that only root user can install software and
configure the system. Basically an IT or system-builder's friend in that it can run nicely on old hardware. Very easy for users
to get things done because of the software selection and utilities and documentation -- yet difficult for them to mess things up.
This leads to 2 things:
-
Home "power" users may take to running as root all the time -- not
smart but, hey, I'm also often guilty as charged as I play with development
-
IT guys who set up machines at work and schools don't have to worry about folks messing things up.
They set up a machne, hook it up to the internet and/or network, throw on OpenOffice from the Absolute CD2,
plug in the printer and walk away saying "there you go -- call me when the hardware dies."
|
To me it is Linux at its best --
completely configurable for those with the knowledge and inclination, but useable and productive "out of the box"
for anyone, thanks to small, single-purpose applications and utilities to help get things done.
The system is built to do what I want it to do. Nothing less but nothing more. I want the user interface to have robust functionality,
but also STAY OUT OF MY WAY.
Below are some feature highlights related to the installed software:
|
- icewm/pcmanfm/ROX_Filer as a window/file manager(s) combination
Very lightweight and responsive. Common attachable device handling built into the kernel
and accessible via pcmanfm and playable media pops up menu via ivman. Pcmanfm slightly modified to
enable openning current folder with ROX-Filer and to send current path to clipboard.
Has Fluxbox/Fox PathFinder as an alternative or backup.
- Time-saving utilities
Slackware is wonderful, don't get me wrong -- but to new users the configuration and maintenance
can be time-consuming and frustrating. Rather than try to create an all-in-one solution with tons
of processing overhead, like KDE and others -- Absolute is still controlled completely by the same simple
text files that Slackware uses, but several small utilities were made as a front end to these. For instance,
there is one to make a new user with common rights and permissions to desktop stuff. Just put in
a name and password, and the user is created. But you can still go in and edit group permissions
and all the rest the same way as with a basic Slackware machine. But most folks,
most of the time, will never have to bother.
See the
Custom Utilities page for details.
There are a lot of them.
- Preconfigured menus/shortcuts
Not the kind of thing you would worry about when using a desktop environment like KDE, Windows or Gnome,
But with a bare-bones window/file manager these things are not normally setup. When you add something
you have to worry about making a menu item, a shortcut, setting the appropriate filetype
action to be taken . . . it can be tedious. With Absolute, the menus/associations are already set up
for the preinstalled applications (and even for some that are not yet -- like OpenOffice.) So you get the
raw speed of a lightweight desktop without any of the inconvenience.
- Desktop-oriented software
Server software, emacs and many applications desktop users have no need for or interest in are
skipped while stuff like Deluge(bittorrent - on CD2), K3B (CD-burning), MPlayer (movie/DVD player), Firefox
(browser - but Links2 is there for older machines), some real games and many other titles desktop users actually
want are already there.
- Customized install
Same BASIC text-based CD installer as Slackware, but package selection is NOT an option.
All included packages are installed and take up about 1.8Gb of hard drive space. [My last install test,
with the hard drive already partitioned, took me 15 minutes.] Sound and volume are preset on first boot if Alsa
(the sound system) supports your sound card. The first time started you log in
as root, make whatever users or configuration changes you would like, then go about your business.
- Documentation
This is often the most overlooked feature in Open-Source Software. But as you can see in the screenshot
section, Absolute has a menu section that holds an extensive library of manuals for specific
applications, as well as for the file and window managers and even more generally for Slackware (upon which
Absolute is based) and Linux.
|