Comment by etaioinshrdlu
4 years ago
The Xwoaf-rebuild-4.0 floppy image booted up for me first try in Parallels. Made me unreasonably happy.
Linux 2.2.26 is kind of hilariously old. Linux 2.2 was released in 1999.
4 years ago
The Xwoaf-rebuild-4.0 floppy image booted up for me first try in Parallels. Made me unreasonably happy.
Linux 2.2.26 is kind of hilariously old. Linux 2.2 was released in 1999.
FWIW, it also runs out-of-the-box in QEMU, VMWare and Virtualbox.
Wouldn't it work with a newer kernel though, too?
Generally speaking, newer kernels are bigger.
Back in the day, Damn Small Linux (DSL) made the controversial decision to stake themselves to Linux 2.4 because 2.6 was just too big and bloated, they said.
A newer kernel most definitely wouldn't fit on a floppy. 2.4+ was where they loosened the requirements and kernels started getting into the multi-megabyte territory.
Linux 2.4 could fit in a floppy perfectly. Check NehaBodi, nethack 3.4.3 in a floppy disk.
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my first time touching Linux, was when these Kernel versión was new.