This is gonna blow your mind. There this thing called the internet, and people put loads of information on it. You can access this using “websites” called “search engines” that index all the content.
According to this, the first was Boot-Root from Torvalds himself in 1991. The oldest that are still around are Slackware (July 1993) and Debian (Aug 1993).
Slackware was the first real distro, which means you could reasonably expect to get to a bootable state by following the manual, and have a useful system out of the box.
And it’s the oldest that’s still around.
Wait…Ubuntu is only 20? What’s the first linux? I thought ubuntu was older.
The fact that Ubuntu is derived from Debian logically means it wasn’t the first Linux-based OS.
But how would I know that?
This is gonna blow your mind. There this thing called the internet, and people put loads of information on it. You can access this using “websites” called “search engines” that index all the content.
Wow, can you tell me more about this thing called the internet? Where does the information get stored?
/s
Doesn’t make for good conversation or content my guy
According to this, the first was Boot-Root from Torvalds himself in 1991. The oldest that are still around are Slackware (July 1993) and Debian (Aug 1993).
I wonder if someone could still install boot root? I’m not a techy person, but I’d watch the hell out of that YouTube video!
Sadly, I did not find Boot-Root 1991 but found these:
https://archiveos.org/tamu/
https://archiveos.org/sls/
https://archiveos.org/linux-from-nascent/
https://archiveos.org/lst/
And boot-root 2002:
https://archiveos.org/tomsrtbt/
Dang, that would have been a cool one to see!
I’d love to see what those looked like back in the day. I love computer history, even if I don’t fully understand it. Haha
Suse Linux, Debian and slackware are way older than Ubuntu.
Red Hat
SLS and Yggdrasil came out in '92; Slackware in '93; Red Hat in '95.
The Debian project started in '93, but the first stable release wasn’t until '96, along with Linux kernel version 2.0.
Ubuntu didn’t come along until 2004.
Slackware was the first real distro, which means you could reasonably expect to get to a bootable state by following the manual, and have a useful system out of the box.
And it’s the oldest that’s still around.