Berry Linux is a Live CD Linux distribution that has English and Japanese support. Berry Linux is based on and is compatible with Fedora 39 packages. The distribution is primarily focused on use as a Live CD, but it can also be installed to a live USB drive. Berry Linux can be used to try out and showcase Linux, for educational purposes, or as a rescue system, without the need to make changes to a hard disk. The current version is 1.39 released on 31 May 2024.[2][3][4]

Berry Linux
Berry Linux Live CD (version 1.17)
DeveloperYuichiro Nakada
OS familyLinux (Unix-like)
Working stateCurrent
Source modelOpen source
Available inEnglish, Japanese
Package managerRPM
Platforms
Kernel typeMonolithic kernel (Linux)
Default
user interface
LXDE, Maynard
Official websitehttp://berry-lab.net/

Features

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Berry includes read/write NTFS support, and AIGLX and Beryl are bundled for 3D desktop effects. Berry also uses bootsplash, giving it a graphical startup.[5]

The full version (v1.12) includes and runs on Linux Kernel 3.0.4. It has the ALSA sound system, ACPI support, and SELinux. Berry Linux features automatic hardware detection, with support for many graphics cards, sound cards, SCSI, USB devices and many other peripherals. Network devices are automatically configured with DHCP.

The full version of Berry Linux uses KDE (Version 4.6.5) while Berry Linux Mini uses the Fluxbox window manager. The full version is 512.7MB, while the mini version is 273.4MB. To test Berry Linux it is not necessary to install the distribution to a hard disk, as the operating system runs entirely from CD-ROM. It is, however, possible to install Berry Linux to a hard disk, which requires 1.7 gigabytes of free space. Supporting Japanese, Berry includes Whiz, a sharp Kana-Kanji conversion system. It also comes with LibreOffice version 3.4.3, a Microsoft Office compatible office suite, as well as TextMaker/PlanMaker as Berry's office software. The GIMP, version 2.6.10, is bundled for graphics software.

Berry includes the media players Audacious, MPlayer, Xine, and Kaffeine. DVD and DivX codecs are installed by default.

Version history

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Berry Linux's historical releases are as following.[6]

Berry Linux
Release Date Version Number Based on
2003-11-11 Berry Linux 0.29 Fedora Core 1
2004-01-21 Berry Linux 0.35 Kernel 2.6
2004-07-21 Berry Linux 0.43 Fedora Core 2
2004-12-15 Berry Linux 0.51 Fedora Core 3
2005-07-21 Berry Linux 0.60 Fedora Core 4
2006-04-18 Berry Linux 0.69 Fedora Core 5
2006-11-20 Berry Linux 0.76 Fedora Core 6
2007-07-10 Berry Linux 0.87 Fedora 7
2008-02-24 Berry Linux 0.88 Fedora 8
2008-05-17 Berry Linux 0.91 Fedora 9
2008-12-07 Berry Linux 0.94 Fedora 10
2009-01-29 Berry Linux 0.95
2009-04-10 Berry Linux 0.96
2009-06-22 Berry Linux 0.97
2009-09-14 Berry Linux 0.98 Fedora 11
2010-03-15 Berry Linux 1.01 Fedora 12
2010-08-31 Berry Linux 1.04 Fedora 13
2011-05-24 Berry Linux 1.10 Fedora 14
2011-10-30 Berry Linux 1.12 Fedora 15
2012-02-06 Berry Linux 1.13 Fedora 16
2012-05-28 Berry Linux 1.14
2012-06-23 Berry Linux 1.15 Fedora 17
2012-12-31 Berry Linux 1.17
2014-06-23 Berry Linux 1.18 Fedora 20
2015-01-08 Berry Linux 1.19 Fedora 21
2015-05-29 Berry Linux 1.20
2015-11-22 Berry Linux 1.21 Fedora 23
2015-12-31 Berry Linux 1.22 Fedora 24
2017-01-08 Berry Linux 1.24 Fedora 25
2017-11-27 Berry Linux 1.26 Fedora 27
2019-07-08 Berry Linux 1.31 Fedora 30
2020-03-17 Berry Linux 1.32 Fedora 31
2021-07-07 Berry Linux 1.35 Fedora 34
2022-02-22 Berry Linux 1.36 Fedora 35
2022-12-14 Berry Linux 1.37 Fedora 37
2023-11-24 Berry Linux 1.38 Fedora 39
2024-05-31 Berry Linux 1.39 Fedora 40

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Berry Linux". berry-lab.net. Retrieved 21 Dec 2021.
  2. ^ yum! raspBerry 0.60 | Tux Machines
  3. ^ A Taste of the Berry 0.65 | Tux Machines
  4. ^ DistroWatch Weekly, Issue 162, 31 July 2006
  5. ^ Berry Linux, Softpedia News
  6. ^ "Berry Linux". distrowatch.com. Retrieved 21 Dec 2021.
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