[bottom posting]

Den 2016-08-12 kl. 09:33, skrev Narcis Garcia:
The lightest variant of Ubuntu, Lubuntu, should fit on a traditional
CD-ROM and should be installable without internet access. This is the
typical scenario (small computer, small internet) where someone chooses
Lubuntu.

I believe all basic variants of Lubuntu should fit on a 700MB CD-ROM:
i386-desktop*
powerpc-desktop*
i386-alternate
powerpc-alternate

- Why Mozilla software is kept instead of CUPS?? What about Midori
browser or others? Firefox is 45MiB compressed, Midori 11MiB, full CUPS
10MiB.
- If someone needs Sylpheed, has internet access, then can install it
after; same with Pidgin and Transmission.
- Abiword can be a good selection; Gnumeric is not too esential as the
word processor is.
- How many partition managers are needed? GParted + gnomedisks ?
- How many package managers are needed? Synaptic + softwarecenter ?
- How many audio players are needed? Audacious + gnomemplayer ?
- Why there are 73MiB (compressed) dedicated to fonts-noto-cjk ? And
8MiB to fonts-nanum ?
- 14MiB (compressed) dedicated to software-center metadata
(app-install-data) ?
- 9MiB for linux-headers ? Need to recompile kernel/modules offline?
- About gnome-icon-theme (9MiB), I believe that it should be split in
gnome-icon-theme-minimal and gnome-icon-theme-full; then select only the
minimal for ISO media.


(*) Live sessions are essential to check if the OS works, before
installing over a previous OS in the computer.



El 11/08/16 a les 20:13, Ian Bruntlett ha escrit:
Hi there,

On 11 August 2016 at 19:00, Aere Greenway <a...@dvorak-keyboards.com
<mailto:a...@dvorak-keyboards.com>> wrote:

    On 08/11/2016 11:49 AM, Narcis Garcia wrote:

        I believe that the problem is on software selection to build
        live/install media, and not on any software package.
        If live/install media hasn't CUPS, seems to be caused by a
        discard decision.

        What I don't understand is, if this decision is for CD space
        reasons,
        why Lubuntu ISOs are still over 700MB.

    I would be very surprised if cups were intentionally discarded for
    space reasons.

    The ability to print is a necessity for any computer you do actual
    work with (in my opinion).

    If things are that desperate space-wise, the goal of fitting it on a
    CD should be abandoned, and defeat admitted.


It currently doesn't fit on a CD. To install one of the Ubuntus, go to
http://cdimages.ubuntu.com/netboot/ and download the relevant iso. From
what I see there, 32-bit Ubuntus can be installed by putting a 48M iso
onto CD-R and choosing options - e.g. Ubuntu or Lubuntu packages - at
install time. I've been using a NetBoot CD-R for some of my 32-bit
installs.

HTH,


Ian

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Hi all Narcis, Aere and all other Lubuntu users and developers,

I agree that this is a very important subject to discuss:

1. To be or not to be within CD size

2. if we decide that the Lubuntu iso files should be within CD size, which program packages to skip or replace.

3. else, which program packages to add or replace to take advantage of the release from the CD size limit.

-o-

Where should be draw the limit? Are there any ten year old computers, that cannot boot from DVD or USB? My twelve year old Dell Dimension 4600 can boot from both DVD and USB without any problems. Many older computers can chainload via Plop and boot Lubuntu from a USB pendrive.

I think it is time to give up, and let Lubuntu grow beyond the CD size, and to take the opportunity to improve the selection of program packages.

Best regards
Nio


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