Introduction To Linux
Introduction To Linux
• History of Linux
• Features Supported Under Linux
• A Few Myths About Linux
• Unresolved Issues in Linux
• Major Supporters of Linux
• Some Reasons to Use Linux
• Online Resources and Contact Information
Linus now works for Transmeta Corp. in California. Home page: www.cs.helsinki.fi/~torvalds
The Beginning
year.
Recent estimates say about 18 million people use Linux
worldwide. This doesn’t include non-personal computers,
such as server machines on the Internet and other networks.
Red Hat has over 30 million lines of source code, mostly in C. Source: David Wheeler
Linux Today
Though Linus never imagined it, Linux quickly became a
general tool for computing. People stopped looking at
Linux as a toy, and began to think about it seriously. Today
there are thousands of applications that can be run on
Linux, from Office Suites to 3D games. Hundreds of Linux
User Groups the world over discuss ways to make Linux
work better. Umpteen number of web sites, and thousands
of newsgroups and mailing lists talk about Linux.
Bangalore hosts a Linux convention every year, called
Bang!inux.
There are more than 200 distributions of Linux today. To create your own, visit LinuxFromScratch.org
Distributions of Linux
COMPILER / EXE
CODE
ASSEMBLER
Google, Amazon, CNN and Yahoo all run UNIX based operating systems. Source: NetCraft
software
Stallman does. liked UNIX so much that he wanted to make a free
alternative to it. The GNU [guh’-noo] project, started in 1984,
has developed thousands of software which do all that the
original UNIX tools did, but with a difference: you can
modify them, share with your friends, and use however you
want. GNU and Linux share a symbiotic relationship.
While the Linux kernel still lies at the core, GNU
software make the system much more functional.
Images: gnu.org Hence the awkward but accurate: GNU/Linux
The Linux ext2 file-system supports up to 4000 GB of data
• Linux has legendary stability. Blue screens are unknown; crashes, very
rare.
• Linux is ideal for networking: You can freely set up a functional and
stable router, firewall, Web server, mail server, or FTP server right out of
the box.
• Linux can talk with many other systems, including NT, NetWare and
Sun. It supports multiple-processes and -processors, and a variety of file
systems.
• Low resource requirements of Linux means you can bring even a 386
to glory
• Linux gives you choice from GUIs and shells to everything. The range
of applications is huge, and powerful package management systems exist.
• Linux is reliable, secure, easily upgradeable, and has an open design,
logical file system layout and supportive community, which make it a
zero-maintenance system
My Linux advocacy page has other useful documents if you are interested in using Linux. Link below.