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Live CD
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=== Linux === [[File:Lgx yggdrasil fall 1993.jpg|thumb|CD-ROM of the LGX Yggdrasil Linux distribution release "Fall 1993"]] Although early developers and users of distributions built on top of the [[Linux kernel]] could take advantage of cheap optical disks and rapidly declining prices of CD drives for personal computers, the [[Linux distribution]] CDs or "distros" were generally treated as a collection of installation packages that would first need to be permanently installed to hard disks on the target machine. However, in the case of these distributions built on top of the Linux kernel, the [[Free software|free]] operating system was meeting resistance in the consumer market because of the perceived difficulty, effort, and risk involved in installing an additional partition on the hard disk, in parallel with an existing operating system installation. The term "live CD" was coined because, after typical PC RAM was large enough and 52x speed CD drives and CD burners were widespread among PC owners, it finally became convenient and practical to boot the kernel and run [[X11]], a window manager and GUI applications directly from a CD without disturbing the OS on the hard disk. This was a new and different situation for Linux than other operating systems, because the updates/upgrades were being released so quickly, different distributions and versions were being offered online, and especially because users were burning their own CDs. The first [[Linux]]-based 'Live CD' was [[Yggdrasil Linux]] first released in beta form 1992~1993 (ceased production in 1995), though in practice its functionality was hampered due to the low throughput of contemporary CD-ROM drives. [[DemoLinux]], released in 1998, was the first Linux distribution specially designed as a live CD. The [[Linuxcare]] [[bootable business card]], first released in 1999, was the first Live CD to focus on system administration, and the first to be distributed in the bootable business card form factor. {{As of|2023}}, [[Finnix]] (first released in spring 2000) is the oldest Live CD still in production. Shortly followed by [[Knoppix]], a [[Debian]]-derived Linux distribution, also still produced, it first released in fall 2000 and found popularity as both a [[data recovery|rescue disk]] system and as a primary distribution in its own right. Since 2003, the popularity of live CDs has increased substantially, partly due to [http://www.linux-live.org/ Linux Live scripts] and [[remastersys]], which made it very easy to build customized live systems. Most of the popular [[Linux distribution]]s now include a live CD variant, which in some cases is also the preferred installation medium.
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