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6LLvveMx2koXfwn 6 hours ago

Did I misremember downloading Slackware to 12 floppies in 1997?

flomo 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Before then, a local clone store had an 'insane deal' on floppy disks, and they came with Slackware. I had a Mac, and the floppies weren't very good so.

gattilorenz 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

MuLinux was also a floppy-based “live” distro, with optional floppy disks for X11, programming languages, etc.

UncleSlacky 2 hours ago | parent [-]

There was also "Tom's Root Boot" distro that fitted on a floppy:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomsrtbt

mkesper an hour ago | parent [-]

That had to use non-standard image size though. Mind blowing this fits now into regular 1.44MB.

cricalix 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

12‽ I'd swear the Slackware I downloaded was closer to 30+. On dialup. Via a VAX. Using FTP to go from internet to the VAX box, then Kermit from the VAX to the DOS PC using Procomm Plus. Write it all, start the install sequence, find out that the 18th disk was bad. Reboot. Rinse. Repeat.

X disks were X11. There were also the A,B, C etc disks.

Then there was the Coherent install, with massive manual on ultra thin paper with the shell on the front.

stackghost 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Probably not. Pretty sure it was Puppy Linux (among I'm sure others) that could be run on just two floppies. I used to have this old 933MHz Coppermine system that I took when a medical office was going to throw it out, some time in the early 00s.

The HDD was borked but it had a 3.5" bay that worked, so I got a floppy-based distro running on it. I later replaced the drive and then made the mistake of attempting to compile X11 on it. Results were... mixed.