Company / developer | The SliTaz GNU/Linux Association; Slitaz.org / Christophe Lincoln |
---|---|
OS family | Unix-like |
Working state | Current |
Source model | Open source |
Initial release | 22 March 2008 [1] |
Latest stable release | 3.0 / March 28, 2010[2] |
Latest unstable release | cooking / May 31, 2011 |
Package manager | Tazpkg |
Supported platforms | x86 |
Kernel type | Monolithic (Linux) |
Default user interface | LXDE, JWM |
License | GNU GPL and various others |
Official website | slitaz.org |
SliTaz GNU/Linux is a community-based software project started in 2006 by Christophe Lincoln. It is a Linux distribution with a root filesystem that takes up approximately 100 MB of disk space, and its ISO image installation media is around 30 MB.[3][4][5] This makes it suitable for use on older hardware, or as a backup Linux LiveCD environment.[6] SliTaz, which stands for Simple Light Incredible Temporary Autonomous Zone,[7] boots from either a CD or a USB key, into an Openbox desktop, and uses BusyBox for many of its core functions. It has a wide range of desktop and rescue software available and can be loaded entirely into RAM, or installed to a hard drive.[8]
Contents |
After 1 year of community development, SliTaz 3.0 was released on March 28, 2010. SliTaz shares many common goals with Damn Small Linux, but is smaller (30 MB ISO) and keeps its Linux kernel up to date (kernel 2.6.30.6 as of March 28, 2010).
SliTaz GNU/Linux supports all machines based on the i486 or x86 Intel compatible processors. The "core" LiveCD environment requires 192 MB of RAM to run efficiently. Additionally, there is a reduced functionality graphical installer LiveCD environment titled "loram-slitaz" which requires 80 MB to run efficiently. Finally, there is the "loram-slitaz-cdrom" flavor, which is a simple text-based installer, and it requires 16 MB. Regardless of installation method, however, SliTaz requires at least 16 MB of RAM to run efficiently.[9]
The low system requirements make SliTaz particularly suited to Netbook computers. As such, SliTaz includes support for a wide range of Netbooks.[9]
SliTaz boots from:
SliTaz has its own original tools:
Version | Release date | Stability |
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1.0 | 23 March 2008 | Stable version |
2.0 | 16 April 2009 | Stable version |
3.0 | 28 March 2010 | Current stable version |
31 May 2011 | Current cooking version |
Apart from the LiveCD, other versions include:
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