• @modeler@lemmy.world
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    28 days ago

    Linux was not muscled like that in 1991 - it’s first, barebones kernel was released in September of that year.

    I remember installing Linux on a 90MHz 486 in the mid 90s and it barely ran X server with a simple window manager. And if the machine was turned off while Linux was running, you might not be able to boot again.

    Linux now, however, is unrecognizeably better.

    • @mlg@lemmy.world
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      028 days ago

      I remember someone here made a detailed list of how lots of the early linux FOSS stuff was essentially ripoff of unix software lol. I think XFCE was originally a knockoff of CDE or something with XForms. Now it’s the de facto performance DE and the default on Kali.

      • @HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
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        128 days ago

        XFCE’s old panel was a distinct mimic of CDE’s. I liked it…

        But now CDE is open source and NsCDE gives you the same look with a highly customised fvwm config if you don’t want to stick to the Motif universe.

  • Greg Clarke
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    029 days ago

    I liked OpenSolaris, you could order a free CD from their website and they’d post it, even internationally.

    • @bazzett@lemmy.world
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      128 days ago

      I still have one of those! 😆

      Didn’t use it too much, tho. Never installed it on bare metal, only in a VM, and back in those days I was in my distro-hopping phase (I was discovering Arch), so I tested it and quickly forgot about it.

      • Greg Clarke
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        128 days ago

        Thanks for digging it up and sharing the photo! It’s nostalgic seeing this