from a post by Texstar

http://www.pclinuxos.com/index.php?option=com_smf&Itemid=26&topic=29104.msg223220

In the summer of 2003 I became interested in livecd technology after looking at knoppix and a fresh distribution from a fellow named Warren called Mepis. I was interested in helping Warren with Mepis at the time but I had no clue how to build Deb files. Coming from 5 years of packaging rpms and not really wanting to learn a new packaging system I happened to come across a South African fellow by the name of Jaco Greef. He was developing a script called mklivecd and porting it to Mandrake Linux. I along with Buchanan Milne (Mandrake contributor) and a few others began working with Jaco to help debug the scripts. I got an idea to make a livecd based on Mandrake Linux 9.2 along with all my customizations just for fun. I had previously provided an unofficial 3rd party repository for the users of Mandrake for many years but had since parted ways. Since Mandrake was a trademarked name myself and others decided to name the livecd after our news site and forum pclinuxonline thus PCLinuxOS.

Preview .3 was my first attempt to make a livecd. I distributed it initially to about 20 people to get their reaction and feedback. Everyone who tested it loved the livecd but there was one thing missing. There wasn't a way to install the thing to the hard drive! srlinuxx from tuxmachines.org came up with a novel way to copy the livecd to the hard drive and posted it on our forums. Jaco utilized this information and inspiration from the Mepis installer and wrote a pyqt script to make the livecd installable thus the birth of a new distribution.

On October 24, 2003, PCLinuxOS Preview .4 was released as a fork of Linux Mandrake (Mandriva) 9.2 utilizing mklivecd scripts from Jaco Greef, a multimedia kernel from Thomas Buckland (2.4.22-tmb) and a customized KDE (3.1.4-tex). Preview .5 through .93 were built upon on previous PCLinuxOS releases. After 3 years of updating one release from the other using the same gcc and glibc core library we found too many programs would no longer compile or work properly against this aging code base.

In November 2006 we utilized a one time source code snapshot from our friends at Mandriva to pull in an updated glibc/gcc core and associated libraries. We spent the following 6 months rebuilding, debugging, customizing, patching and updating our new code base. We pulled in stuff from our old code base, utilized patches/code from Fedora, Gentoo and Debian just to name a few. This is why you will never see me distro bashing as it would be hypocritical to do such a thing since we are still dependent in many areas on other distros development processes due to our limited but hard working volunteer development team.

On May 20th 2007 we felt we had reached a pretty stable base and released PCLinuxOS 2007 utilizing our own kernel from Oclient1, KDE built by MDE developer Ze, updated mklivecd scripts from IKerekes & Ejtr, a heavily patched Control Center, graphics from the PCLinuxOS beautification team and many application updates from Thac and Neverstopdreaming. Development continues as work is being done for a Minime release and an international DVD. A future release of PCLinuxOS will feature an updated kernel, KDE 4, fresh Xorg server and all the latest applications. All in all it has been a great ride and we have made many friends along the way. Some have gone on to other distributions and many are still here from our first release. As I've always said, we're just enjoying Linux technology and sharing it with friends who might like it too. We hope you have enjoyed the ride as well.

Here are some screenshots from some of our previous releases.

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Preview 7 brought in KDE 3.2.3. We were still on the 2.4 kernel using devfs as udev didn't exist as yet.

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Preview 8 had my favorite livecd boot splash with the tux penguin in a cowboy hat and a 6 shooter. Preview 8 was a troublesome update for many as we switched to the 2.6 kernel series along with udev replacing devfs.

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Preview .91 brought in the 2.6.11 kernel from ocilent1, graphics from J Rangels and KDE 3.4.1

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Preview .92 was probably my favorite release graphically until our 2007 release. Some of our friends said it was really pretty if you like blue! lol This release provided updated kernel to 2.6.12 and KDE 3.4.3.

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