
Mandrake Linux
10.0-preview edition pretty much defines the shape of things to come in Linux land in 2004. With Kernel 2.6, KDE 3.2 beta and XFree86 4.4 beta, it doesn't leave much to be desired. This article refers to cooker snapshot as of December 31, 2003. Please note that this release is not a beta release. This is not even an alpha release. Its just something put together to show what we can expect from Mandrake 10.0. This release comes on only two CDs so some of the packages are missing. And as there are bound to be lot of bugs in this kind of release, I'll be concentrating more on the usability aspect. So let's see if it is worth drooling over.
Drives in Unix or any OS with a Unix-based file structure occupy a directory hierarchy that begins at "/". No matter how many storage devices you add, there's still only one "/".
Windows, DOS, etc., require that each drive be mapped to a unique letter identifying that drive. Although DOS, and Windows, mimic the hierarchical structure of a Unix filesystem, there's nothing to stop you from havinh multiple roots on multiple dirves.