Corel Linux 1.1.2, 1999
from Sinclair-Speccy@fedia.io to linux@lemmy.ml on 18 Sep 2024 21:49
https://fedia.io/m/linux@lemmy.ml/t/1213739

Corel Linux OS, version 1.1.2, running on Linux kernel 2.2.12. The system hostname is "CoreLinux" and it's identified as i586 architecture. The desktop features a traditional early Linux environment with a control panel open, titled "Control Center," which offers various settings categories like Desktop, Information, Network, Sound, Windows, and more. The desktop icons include shortcuts for Trash, My Home, Netscape, and Printer. At the bottom, there's a taskbar with quick-launch icons for a web browser, text editor, and help, and a clock showing "Wed Jan 01, 12:41 AM."

#linux

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richardisaguy@lemmy.world on 18 Sep 2024 22:52 next collapse

why does it look so much like windows

Sinclair-Speccy@fedia.io on 18 Sep 2024 23:36 next collapse

@richardisaguy It mainly competed against Windows 98 and Windows 2000 by Microsoft so I guess they were trying to jump on the hype with using a similar interface

markstos@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 00:26 collapse

Correct. Not just hype but to make it “Like Windows, but free”.

Even then it could be themed to a degree and some distros tried to look more like Windows than others.

zenharbinger@lemmy.world on 18 Sep 2024 23:58 collapse

looks like old school kde

lord_ryvan@ttrpg.network on 19 Sep 2024 05:07 collapse

TBF first time I saw KDE I called it “Can’t believe it’s not Windows” the DE.

It looks pretty kool, even if it looks very much like Windows

markstos@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 00:28 next collapse

I remember that this existed, but I don’t remember why.

Corel was known for a drawing program and later for WordPerfect. They were never well known for their involvement with Linux.

schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business on 19 Sep 2024 01:08 next collapse

Linux was the NFT or Blockchain or AI of 1999, so every tech company was jumping on board.

The sales pitch, as I remember, was that you could run your Wordperfect or CorelDraw shit on it, and not need to have Windows to use it and instead could join the future, which was Linux. Though, amusingly, their version of the future was running Windows binaries via Wine on Linux which, eh, okay but…

Of course, nobody used Wordperfect or CorelDraw at that point in history so I’m not entirely sure how that was supposed to sell you on buying not-Word and not-Photoshop.

markstos@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 11:00 next collapse

WordPerfect continued to thrive in the legal industry for years to come due to its “reveal codes” feature and the way it counted words.

Here’s a post about that from 2008.

ask.metafilter.com/…/Why-do-so-many-laywers-use-W…

schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business on 20 Sep 2024 16:42 collapse

Yeah, I’ve read about that. But, then again, the legal industry was probably exceedingly low on the likely-to-change-to-Linux probability list in 1999, as well. I’ve worked for some lawyers in the past and they’re a shockingly traditional dont-change-anything-ever group. (Not particularly shocking.)

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 19 Sep 2024 14:46 collapse

Corel was, and still is, used in a lot of industries, like signmaking, embroidery, etc. It has been losing share in the general vector graphics space for years though.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 20 Sep 2024 04:15 collapse

Honestly it wouldn’t be too incredibly crazy for them to make a Linux graphic suite. They could even start maintaining a Linux distro.

However this is would be high risk with a high chance of failure as Linux users don’t usually have big wallets unless you count enterprise servers

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 19 Sep 2024 04:12 collapse

they were trying to make a windows alternative since microsoft was using their leverage w windows to make corel lose money and courts were doing little more than slapping microsoft on the wrist for doing it.

m0stlyharmless@lemmy.ml on 19 Sep 2024 07:24 next collapse

I find it reminiscent to what Valve is doing with SteamOS and Proton today. That is, establishing a viable alternative to MS Windows through using Wine/Proton in order to not be reliant on a competitor for running their software.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 20 Sep 2024 04:12 collapse

Just keep in mind that value can lock you in any day. Steam is proprietary after all.

We don’t need wildly successful companies. We need options and completion

Crashumbc@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 10:57 collapse

Yeah, Bill Gates destroyed a lot of other companies with his OS monopoly, Dbase (Access) and Lotus 1 2 3 (Excel)…

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 19 Sep 2024 16:09 collapse

and now he’s a “philanthropist”

emphasis on the quotes since he’s put his wealth into a charity; like most of the utlra wealth do; to avoid taxes so now he’s legally required to spent 5% of it in philanthropy.

brax@sh.itjust.works on 19 Sep 2024 00:37 next collapse

They nailed the retro-futurism aesthetic with that window UI

Magister@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 00:37 next collapse

Omg I forgot Corel Linux ! I installed it 25 years ago, wow!

friend_of_satan@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 01:41 next collapse

Oh man, what a throwback! I had completely forgotten about this. It made a splash and then I never heard anything more about it. One of my coworkers installed it on his Toshiba laptop and ran it for a week or two before giving up.

qjkxbmwvz@startrek.website on 19 Sep 2024 02:22 next collapse

The only flaw in Corel’s logic was that as soon as you’re running Linux, you lose all desire to run WordPerfect, and develop an irresistible need to align yourself with vim or emacs…

pastermil@sh.itjust.works on 19 Sep 2024 03:53 next collapse

I wonder if this kibd of theme is still available for modern graphical toolkits like Qt6 or GTK4

Darohan@lemmy.zip on 19 Sep 2024 05:00 collapse

My laptop looks very similar to this, running KDE Plasma 6.1, so yes, yes it is.

pastermil@sh.itjust.works on 19 Sep 2024 05:58 collapse

Great, now gimme!

Darohan@lemmy.zip on 19 Sep 2024 06:44 collapse

Look up “Commonality”/“Commonality Sol” (theme), “Reactionary” (theme), and “GNUStep” (icons) on the Plasma theme library, I think you’ll find some stuff you like. Also, in Plasma Settings’ “Window Style”, select “MS Windows 9x”.

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 19 Sep 2024 04:03 next collapse

Logged into GUI as root 🤣

Sinclair-Speccy@fedia.io on 19 Sep 2024 04:24 next collapse

@cyberpunk007 I don’t see what the big issue is…

lord_ryvan@ttrpg.network on 19 Sep 2024 05:08 next collapse

Anyone with physical access to the computer also has full file system access and could wipe everything, even without password or technical knowledge.

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 19 Sep 2024 05:23 collapse

It’s bad for other reasons too, like a script on a website would launch as root… And also without a password if your disk was encrypted your data is protected even if someone has physical access.

It is just generally common knowledge to not run around in God mode all day, otherwise sudo wouldn’t exist.

Sinclair-Speccy@fedia.io on 19 Sep 2024 05:42 collapse

@cyberpunk007

@lord_ryvan

This is running in a VM without any internet access… that will end up getting replaced by another OS anyway

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 19 Sep 2024 14:09 collapse

Oh ya I kind of figured, I was just having a laugh 😂

Sinclair-Speccy@fedia.io on 21 Sep 2024 02:01 collapse

@cyberpunk007

Yeah if it was on a real machine or if I was connecting to the internet I wouldn't be logged in as root ^^;

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 21 Sep 2024 07:55 collapse

I know 😂

Ilgaz@lemm.ee on 19 Sep 2024 05:40 collapse

It was a serious issue back then. People were wandering around on the Internet with root accounts. A lot of #linux IRC channels were kicking&banning anyone with “~root” or “root” ident with educational sentence like “Do not use root account as your ordinary account, check instructions”. We don’t see the issue widespread today since distros did very good intended “dark patterns” to push users to regular user accounts. Linux (or UNIX) “root” account is true god mode. E.g. infamous “rm” as root joke (!) could even affect Windows running WSL2, so MS had to implement special workarounds.

Reddfugee42@lemmy.world on 21 Sep 2024 01:42 collapse

WSL has no direct connection to the host file system. WSL’s drives are virtualized. Which is a real fuckin peach when you just want to copy things to and fro and end up discovering this 😅

Ilgaz@lemm.ee on 12 Nov 2024 05:14 collapse

Dig deeper, it is even more crazy. They use Plan9’es protocol.

Tja@programming.dev on 19 Sep 2024 18:36 collapse

The 90’s was a wild time…

Specially for people coming from windows, this was normal. The appeal of mandrake and corel and suse was this kind of graphical control panel à la windows where you needed root privileges in a graphical interface.

I myself didn’t learn about sudo until years later, and su just from debian 3.0.

Fox@pawb.social on 20 Sep 2024 17:25 collapse

Coming from Kali Linux, this is still normal

davidgro@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 06:51 next collapse

This was my first exposure to Linux - one of the PCs in high school had it installed. (I had read about Linux before then, but not had a chance to try it)

It had a little foam Tux in the box, and I got to keep it:

<img alt="captured_image4006518303694074021" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/56a9fb3c-fb04-44a5-82ee-9666b80692f5.jpeg">

greywolf0x1@lemmy.ml on 19 Sep 2024 09:21 collapse

I hope you use it for duck penguin debugging

twinnie@feddit.uk on 19 Sep 2024 08:25 next collapse

This was my first exposure to Linux. I had no internet at the time so I left it on my computer for a couple of weeks and played with the settings and Snake, then reinstalled Windows so I could play my games again.

JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 20 Sep 2024 02:56 collapse

I had to do a double take between this comment and the one by @davidgro@lemmy.world

shrugs@lemmy.world on 19 Sep 2024 11:04 next collapse

That was my first linux distro I tried, took 12 minutes to boot on my Pentium 75 with 8mb RAM. Still better then win98 though

leopold@lemmy.kde.social on 20 Sep 2024 02:20 collapse

I’m surprised you could even run a Linux distro with X11 and KDE1 on 8MB of RAM.

jherazob@beehaw.org on 19 Sep 2024 11:20 next collapse

Heh, hadn’t seen KDE like this in ages, it’s been a while

Decker108@lemmy.ml on 19 Sep 2024 13:58 next collapse

Whoa, that’s early KDE? They really went all in on looking like contemporary Windows.

leopold@lemmy.kde.social on 20 Sep 2024 01:34 collapse

Qt1 came with two default themes. One of them mimicked Win95 and the other mimicked Motif. KDE1 defaulted to the former in order to look more familiar. To this day, the “Windows 9x” theme still ships with Qt and can be selected on any Plasma 6 install. Starting with KDE2 they started using their own custom themes for everything, tho.

GNOME 1 actually looked very similar, which isn’t surprising because its main goal at that point was to offer a replacement for KDE that didn’t depend on then-proprietary Qt. GNOME 2 and KDE 2 is when they really started building a distinct identity.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 20 Sep 2024 04:07 collapse

*CDE

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 20 Sep 2024 04:07 next collapse

Please be advised that Corel Linux was discontinued in August 15, 2000. It is no longer be receiving any security patches.

Sinclair-Speccy@fedia.io on 21 Sep 2024 02:00 collapse

@possiblylinux127 As I said in a previous comment this is an emulator this is running in a VM

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 21 Sep 2024 04:55 collapse

You should really update to something actively supported.

(My original comment was mostly a joke)

Auli@lemmy.ca on 21 Sep 2024 16:41 collapse

My first linux distro.