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Re: SEUL: Partitioning
> rather than doing an actual trial installation, which is ridden
> with technical issues, and may actually not gain us real users in the end,
> i think a productive investment of effort would be (once we have
> a product) to produce a demoreel of some sort that runs under various
> platforms, and gives a good preview of what to expect after going through
> [what the user may (despite our best efforts) view as] installation hell.
Maybe... That has it's own issues. That entails a complete group dedicated
to doing evil M$ things. There are two types of demos (of the type you're
talking about): movie and interactive. A movie wouldn't be hard, an
interactive one would have to be done as a trial install.
OTOH, it might be possible to, as someone suggested before, use loadlin or
simliar to load both the kernel and a full root image into RAM from within
Windoze or DOS, shoot Win in the head, and boot to the root image. You then
have the thing run off either a live image on the CD or use a userfs-based
program I've been thinking about. The idea there is to "mount" a RPM or dpkg
file as a filesystem, either mounting it using IFS or just symlink things into
place. That means you can run an entire system off a root image that
virtually mounts all the packages from the original package files.
That makes the entire demo/trial thing somewhat of a moot point, since it
really consists of only a few minor projects: live image vs. userfs package
mounter, initrd vs. loopback from CD, and how to handle user config during
'demo'.
> in summary, marketing wins. i suggest doing things in the following order:
>
> 1. make a product, and make it the real thing.
> the top priority should be that a full-blown, fast,
> what-linux-was-meant-to-be installation will work well.
Most definitely. The demo/trail thing should be a very low-priroity thing,
driven by marketing if anyone...
> (it is our job in step 1 to make the real installation technically
> feasible, so there is no argument for the loopback install
> being significantly safer.)
In the overall scheme of things, doing a loopback install would be a bad idea.
The investment involved in doing an install to a loopback file is equivalent
to a full install (well, almost), and if we can do a complete run-of-CD
'demo', no one will want to do a loopback install.
> 3. extra stuff.
> maybe some of you really dig this loopback idea, and think you can
> code it. if so, go for it. more extensions to linux are always good
> to have around.
EXACTLY!!! Just because something may not be "official sanction" by this
project doesn't mean it shouldn't/won't ever be done. If you want to do
something anyway, go for it, just keep in contact with the main group. If you
can "robustify" (nifty word, I invented it a few days ago... ;-) the code, it
might indeed make it's way into SEUL eventually.
> get it integrated into distributions.
Exactly.
TTYAL,
Omega
Erik Walthinsen - Programmer, webmaster, 3D artist, etc. __
__ / /\
/ \ omega@sequent.com Work: (503)578-5314 / / \
| | M E G A omega@aracnet.com Home: (503)281-4281 / / /\ \
_\ /_ psu12113@odin.cc.pdx.edu Majoring in CS / / /\ \ \
/ /_/__\ \ \
Omega Station: http://www.aracnet.com/~omega/ /________\ \ \
Info on Linux, Graphics, Descent, Laptops, etc. \___________\/
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