Monday, June 6, 2011

Almost time for an upgrade, and a test drive

Two recent FLOSS announcements has me excited - maiden release of Mageia and the Beta3 version of Mandriva 2011. Means I have something new (nothing geeky, I assure you) to write about. It's about time I did some justice to the fact that I earn my livelihood from a related industry. Read on.

Would have loved to see Mandriva announcing a final 2011 version by now. But, considering the fact that it has recently been into too much of a turmoil, this nearer to stable release is more than welcome. For the uninitiated, Mandriva is a Linux distribution specializing in the desktop OS segment. It has also made some foray into the  corporate market providing server class solutions to a few medium and large organizations.
Mandriva Logo
Sales pitch aside, Mandriva has always been my distro of choice whenever I wanted Linux on my personal computer, from the days I started using one of it's earlier avatar, Mandrake 7.0. During those college days, besides the learning motive, Mandriva gave me a better looking option against the rather dull Windoze XP (and the duller 98). And then, unlike other distros of those days, it let me play MP3s, watch videos and could 'see' all the FAT32 partitions without much of the geeky mount magic. It got me hooked and I have remained faithful ever since. The reasons have remained pretty much the same over the years with a few minor geeky additions. Look and feel is one big factor influencing my choice of distros and I have preferred it's bluish look to the rather dull brownish default look of Ubuntu. A default brown setup somehow does not strike any chords with me, even to attempt any customization. How I wish Mandriva had a large and strong user base as Ubuntu. It's an easy to use, effective and great looking distro and that is why I spare no opportunity to let people know about it (noticed the Mandriva logo on this blog?).

Mageia, who? For those of you who never heard of Mandriva, I would understand it'd not be wrong to assume that this is the first time you are hearing of Mageia. Mageia, is also a Linux distribution, recently forked out from Mandriva.  
Logo design by Olivier Faurax
The often tumultuous financial situation of Mandriva, led some of its employees and loyal community members to fork out Mageia as an independent community-centered distro. Besides having it's root in Mandriva, this community driven nature is what makes Mageia appealing to me. I wish it luck and hope it fares better than Mandriva.

I am all set to download both these distros and install them on the very first opportunity I get. I'd give myself a couple of weeks to clear out a few priorities and make some space in my bloated laptop, before taking the plunge.

Be it Mageia, Mandriva or Ubuntu, or for that matter even Android, giving us, the users the ability to influence decisions and directions is what enthralls me the most about FLOSS (free/libre/open-source software), and Linux in particular. FLOSS, in fact is about letting people make their choices.


Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The new blog link

My very few audience would actually notice that I have recently changed the URL for my blog to moonlit-musings.blogspot. What it was prior to this, my new audience may never know and actually doesn't matter.

The blog title still remains the same - Musings. Blogger (the site) did not actually let me have my URL as musings.blogspot and so I settled for moonlit-musings.

The link name is partly inspired by the fact that all of these posts have come up in the dead of night. Not under the moonlight per se; I mean, I'd love to muse sitting under a tree on an open field and inspired by the moonlit surroundings. But for now I'd remove myself from thoughts of such opulence. I could try that some day when I figure out something more reasonable to write in my posts.

Speaking of the Moon, I feel a lot connected to this heavenly body. Connected, not the way some of my friends would quip about - "You have a heavenly body too". But, for some reasons it has always been inspiring and it feels good looking at it. And, my given name in অসমীয়া (Assamese), actually means phases of the Moon.
 
Well, this is it for another moonlit musing. Thanks for reading my blog and please do keep visiting.