https://lunduke.substack.com/p/the-linux-distributions-of-1992 The Lunduke Journal of Technology Subscribe * About * Archive * Help * Log in The Linux Distributions of 1992 The modern Linux distros owe their existence to those early releases, back in 1992. Bryan Lunduke [https] Sep 16 6 Share 1992 was an amazing year for Linux. In the span of just a few months, Linux went from "it's technically possible to boot a text mode root environment with two floppies and a hex editor" to "surprisingly capable, full operating system with graphical X Window environment". All while Boyz II Men ("End of the Road") and Sir Mix-a-Lot ("Baby Got Back") ruled the airwaves. I like to imagine those songs playing as the soundtrack to late-night coding sessions as these first Linux releases are getting developed. Let's take a quick, chronological tour through 1992... the first year of "Linux Distributions." As you go through this tour, feel free listen to those songs. You know. To really bring you back to '92. Here we go. The key "Linux distro" releases of 1992. In order. January, 1992 - HJ Lu Boot / Root - Linux 0.12 File:Linux 0 12.jpgTwo floppies. One to boot. One for the root environment. No GUI. No installer. Is it a full "distribution"? I think it counts. February, 1992 - MCC Interim Linux [https]Created at the University of Manchester Computing Centre, MCC was (arguably) the first "full featured" distribution. No X Windows yet. Came on two floppies with an installer. May, 1992 - TAMU Linux [https]TAMU (Texas A & M Unix & Linux User Group) was the first Linux distribution that used X Windows (XFree86). Pretty big deal. May, 1992 - Softlanding Linux System [https]"Gentle Touchdowns for DOS Bailouts" was the slogan. Also included X Windows, but was beaten to release by TAMU... by mere days. December, 1992 - Yggdrasil [https]The first alpha release of Yggdrasil (the best named distro ever) was at the tail end of 1992. The system discontinued in 1995. After 1992... things really heated up. Of the systems created in 1992, SLS (Softlanding Linux System) had what I would consider to be the biggest impact. Because of the general bugginess of SLS, two of the longest running (and most influential) Linux based systems were created... Slackware and Debian both kicked off in 1993 (and are still rocking to this very day). SUSE rolled along in 1994 (which was, initially, based on Slackware), followed shortly thereafter by Red Hat. While there were a lot -- and I mean a lot -- of dramatic improvements to Linux (and the software that ran on it) in the years after 1992... something about that first full year of Linux remains magical. --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Lunduke Journal is made possible entirely through the generosity of nerds just like you. No advertisements, no corporate sponsorships. If you haven't subscribed yet, you can do so and get some fun perks, right here on Substack or over at Lunduke.Locals.com. [ ]Subscribe 6 Share Subscribe - PreviousNext - [https] [ ] Create your profile [ ] Your name[ ]Your bio[ ] [ ][ ] Sign up for the newsletter Save & Post Comment Only paying subscribers can comment on this post Subscribe Already a paying subscriber? Log in Check your email For your security, we need to re-authenticate you. Click the link we sent to , or click here to log in. TopNewCommunityWhat is The Lunduke Journal of Technology?About No posts Ready for more? [ ]Subscribe (c) 2021 Bryan Lunduke. See privacy, terms and information collection notice Publish on Substack The Lunduke Journal of Technology is on Substack - the place for independent writing This site requires JavaScript to run correctly. Please turn on JavaScript or unblock scripts