IBM Using iPod to boot Linux on PCs 318
Applejack writes "Looks like iPod fever has caught on to Big Blue. IBM has a yet unreleased iPod-based software for rescue, restore, and recovery of failed Windows PCs. I read this description of the software on Amit Singh's blog, whose group at IBM apparently created this stuff. If I understand this correctly (and I think I do), the iPod contains IBM's rescue software along with Linux. A crashed PC boots into Linux from the iPod, after which you get all kinds of rescue & restore functionality ... web browsing and all, even if the PC's drive is totally hosed. All this while the iPod keeps working normally as a music player as it would. The blog has pointers to further information, including a Windows Media demo of the thing. " Should be noted this is not iPod specific; USB devices will do.
No, Really? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No, Really? (Score:4, Informative)
-nB
Re:No, Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No, Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No, Really? (Score:2)
Why not use a regular USB drive? It's still much less expensive than an iPod.
Re:No, Really? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No, Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No, Really? (Score:2)
Re:No, Really? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No, Really? (Score:3, Funny)
But what sort of music would be suitable for the RMS ad campaign? The Residents [musicstack.com]?
They have eyes, you know.
Re:No, Really? (Score:2)
To me, I would rather boot from a USB key drive. Much smaller than the iPod cable.
Hello Help Desk (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hello Help Desk (Score:5, Funny)
OOOOHHHH LOOK AT ME!!! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:OOOOHHHH LOOK AT ME!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OOOOHHHH LOOK AT ME!!! (Score:2)
Re:OOOOHHHH LOOK AT ME!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
Not quite (Score:2)
Having been on the road doing service work this is a great thing. Lugging around a laptop and a box of cds is cumbersome.
Though back when i did it, you carried a box of floppies and your portable might have a 10MB drive, if you were lucky....
Noooooo. (Score:2)
That and it's the same song, over and over.
Re:OOOOHHHH LOOK AT ME!!! (Score:2)
Note: yes, I AM whoring the ipod pyramid scheme in my sig. Yes I am making fun of these very schemes. Half the fun, for me, of the free ipod scheme, is the challenge of it.
Re:Good question (Score:2)
Re:Good question (Score:2)
So... (Score:2)
The one advantage of the iPod solution is there are probably times when you have your ipod with you, and a friend's pooter decides to toasty. You won't have a knoppix CD with you - and you probably won't have a flash drive, though some people do go pretty much everywhere with them. But your iPod? When I get one, I plan on having it surgically implanted. Thing's going everywhere.
Re:OOOOHHHH LOOK AT ME!!! (Score:2)
Or you could use Puppy Linux mentioned here [slashdot.org].
Okay, I see the point you menat to make...it's an "all-in-one" solution that you're more likely to have "on your person" in the case of a sudden failure. Sort of like having a swiss army knife in your pocket. Sure, you can use it to clean the dirt out from under your fingernails or clip the sales tag off your new blouse, but you COULD use it to cut your arm off and free yours
Re:OOOOHHHH LOOK AT ME!!! (Score:2)
hmmm... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:hmmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
Play back OOG or FLAC audio files? Oh i know, gapless MP3 playback? Hava a good EQ?
Re:hmmm... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:hmmm... (Score:2)
Re:hmmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:no kidding! (Score:2)
RTFA
Free (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Free (Score:2)
I guess the nice thing about this is that alot of people always have their iPods around, and you have something to write back to if you can recover some lost stuff off your drive.
Re:Free (Score:3, Interesting)
But it begs the question: why would anyone in their right mind boot to Linux to recover a windows machine?
If you have a wayward Windows machine (or think you might have in the future), get this [ubcd4win.com] and stick it on a CD or USB Key.
It's got many more windows-centric tools than the Linux liveCDs including anitivirus, malware removers, registry editor/recovery, NTFS defraggers, WPA tools, network support, web browsing, etc...
Re:Free (Score:3, Informative)
Not very cost-effective (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not very cost-effective (Score:2)
I think this should be carried to the extreme, can someone figure out a way to use one of the new Mustangs as a backup device? Maybe a RAID array designed to fit in the trunk, and the fast car keeps your data out of harm's way (ie impending fire, flood, etc.)
Re:Not very cost-effective (Score:2)
Re:Not very cost-effective (Score:3, Insightful)
Thanks for the idea (Score:5, Funny)
Item Name: Apple iPod
Description: To be used as an external bootable storage device for diagnosing and recovering PC's with failed hard-disks.
Hmmm, wonder if the boss would go for it...
Re:Not very cost-effective (Score:2)
How about the re-writeability of a HD-based medium? What about the screen, and its ability to output several lines of text? Not a great deal, but about as much as a PDA used as a serial terminal, which has been done. Given that the need for a recovery medium presupposes a need for diagnosis, I'd say the iPod is more suited for this than almost anything, even a PDA -- just think how much space a core dump can take up, and you'll see what I mean.
Not ipod specific (Score:2, Informative)
Thanks for this little sentence hidden at the end of the article. And somehow the headline looks rather sensationalist, doesn't it? They are using a USB mass storage device with Linux to rescue broken CDs. Wow. Why did nobody else have this idea before...
Recipe for front page news on Slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
2. Try to work the iPod into the story, no matter how forced
3. Front page!
Re:Recipe for front page news on Slashdot (Score:2, Insightful)
and as far as the iPod used as a recover tool, that's kinda like putting linux on a toaster. you could do it. but why?
for $100 you could have an external firewire hard drive that could do the same or as others have noted.. you could use knoppix/knoppix variants for rescue.
Re:Recipe for front page news on Slashdot (Score:2)
2. Try to work the iPod into the story, no matter how forced
3. Front page!
You forgot...
4. PROFIT!!!
Slashdot grammar (Score:2, Funny)
He is "group at IBM apparently created this stuff"???
That's a very long adjective!
Re:Slashdot grammar (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot grammar (Score:2)
Do I get to be the first humor-impaired person to point out that the correct word is "whose" ? There is no "whom's" in the English language, and "who's" can only be a contraction.
P.S. you also mispeled possesssssive
And this is different from Knoppix how? (Score:2, Insightful)
I wonder how his ears would respond to a free Knoppix CD?
Re:And this is different from Knoppix how? (Score:2, Informative)
1. A USB Flash drive/MP3 player is somthing you might be carrying anyway.
2. It looks as if you can mirror your internal drive to the USB device as a precautionary measure and then boot off the USB drive when the interal one fails. I do this with my iBook and iPod using CCC [bombich.com] or SuperDuper! [shirt-pocket.com]
Of course, your laptop must support booting from USB/Firewire as well.
Re:And this is different from Knoppix how? (Score:2)
In fact, every time we need to do any form of serious data recovery, it means I have to pull out our external USB HD anyway. If I can simply boot off the external drive in the first place, have the system run faster since it's working off a HD instead of a CD-ROM, and get my work done, all the bette
very cool (Score:5, Funny)
All this while the iPod keeps working normally as a music player as it would.
Awesome!
Now sysadmins can listen to chill-out music while repairing mission-critical workstations!
Re:very cool (Score:2)
Actually, they can't, the submitter is wrong. When the iPod is mounted as a harddrive, it stops working and puts up a message asking you not to disconnect it from the computer. At least mine does.
Why didn't the author realize... (Score:2, Informative)
Great Idea, IBM Developers (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh the irony... (Score:5, Funny)
Thank you steve jobs for your magical machine of reconciliation. Do you think we could use IPODs to achieve peace in the mideast?
Re:Oh the irony... (Score:2)
Re:Oh the irony... (Score:2, Insightful)
From Dictionary.com:
: "1.incongruity between what might be expected and what actually occurs: "Hyde noted the irony of Ireland's copying the nation she most hated" (Richard Kain). 2 .An occurrence, result, or circumstance notable for such incongruity."
It is true that the usage is loose however it is not innapropriate. Next time perhaps I will be mo
Re:Oh the irony... (Score:2, Funny)
Cool. A write off. (Score:4, Interesting)
What about the software? (Score:3, Insightful)
(But the iPod solution should be compared to a LiveCD - more like a LiveUSB key.)
On the other hand, if IBM has created a Linux distro for managing and repairing Windows PC's then maybe it has some features that the other Linux distros (like Knoppix) don't have. For example, does it support captive for NTFS defragging and writing?
Yes, I've tried BartPE. I find it's functionality to be quite limited.
Ultimate Boot CD (Score:5, Informative)
It's definitely something to keep handy and is much cheaper than an iPod.
Re:Ultimate Boot CD (Score:2, Funny)
People aren't getting it.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey, here's a question for you who aren't getting it: If you boot up from your Knoppix CD where do you plan on saving your data when you recover?
In case you haven't figured it out, booting from a harddrive/iPod with rescue/live-OS gives you a place to restore your data.
Where to save your data (Score:3, Informative)
1. Any USB/Firewire device
2. Another internal hard drive
3. Any other PC connected through virtually any connection (serial, parallel, cross-over cable, SSH, FTP, etc)
4. Floppy!
Re:Where to save your data (Score:2, Insightful)
If you're going to do this, you might as well just boot of the USB/Firewire device.
2. Another internal hard drive
You don't know that every PC has 2 internal hard drives. Many outfits run cheap as possible.
3. Any other PC connected through virtually any connection (serial, parallel, cross-over cable, SSH, FTP, etc)
Hmm.. How about USB/Firewire?
4. Floppy!
Have fun with that one!
Re:People aren't getting it.... (Score:2)
Re:People aren't getting it.... (Score:2)
boot from iPod (Score:2)
Re:boot from iPod (Score:4, Informative)
not sure what is going on with your 4th gen (i have a 40g 4th gen and a 4g 1st gen mini), because any computer with firewire and/or usb should be able to read it as a hard drive without installing any software at all.
many (most?) windows machines lack the firmware to be able to boot directly off a usb or firewire drive.
One problem (Score:2)
Once they become more common, this does have the advantages over a LiveCD such as Knoppix in the fact that it's somewhat more convenient to carry around with you at all times (many people already do so.) Note the comments that it doesn't interfere with the device's music capabilities at all.
It's an obscene waste of money for someone who doesn't already have an iPod to buy it for these purposes, instead of just using a LiveCD. But if you alread
Re:One problem (Score:2)
This is flatly untrue. Pretty much any post-Pentium!!! motherboard will do it. Hell, I would bet most later-model Pentium!!! and Athlon (non-XP) boards could handle it, too.
The "story" is hardly news, and the iPod angle is just more fanboy masturbation. A bus-powered drive makes far more sense than an iPod in any event - and I'm sure I saw someone selling one of those online.
-Erwos
Re:One problem (Score:2)
The Asus A7V8X (Still a current Asus product, and less than a year old.) also does not support USB boot. (Oddly, the A7V8X-X does support USB boot but doesn't support many of the other features that the A7V8X does.)
In the situations where someone might want a bootable iPod to service many machines (i.e. corporate), there are likely to be PLENTY of P3-era m
Does this mean.. (Score:2)
seriously, why are we throwing such a fit about using the ipod as a cd replacement when if you read the summary, we can use the pinnacle of alphageekdom (sorry, couldnt help the made up word)(who has the largest thumbdrive if you couldnt guess). Most of us have thumbdrives to run this stuff from, quit complaining just becuase someone found that this works on the ipod, and realize that this could be more/less helpful than a slax or knoppix cd (pick spinoff as appropriate). Most of my li
BIOS? (Score:2)
did this in early 2002... (Score:2)
More "innovation".. (Score:4, Funny)
HAH. (Score:2)
Ha! Ha! Oh, Apple, you know I kid because I love you.
But seriously, I did. One ancient laptop, a floppy, a busted CD-ROM drive, and an image of a Gentoo liveCD loaded onto my Archos. I used a Red Hat recovery floppy for the USB drivers, then mounted the image as a loopback device from the MP3 player and chrooted to it. I felt like a badass pulling that one off.
Not a live CD substitute... (Score:2)
You can't WRITE to a LiveCD. I imagine you can write to the iPod while booting off it.
It can be used for other things than rescuing a system due to the fact that you can write back to what you're booting off of.
Re:Not a live CD substitute... (Score:2)
Congrats (Score:2)
You've managed to achieve an unprecedented level on confusion induction in a headline.
I salute you.
Come on editors... (Score:5, Funny)
"IBM has a yet unreleased iPod-based software for rescue, restore, and recovery of failed Windows PCs."
So IBM has not unreleased this software. I know that delays are inevitable in development, but actually moving backwards through time. This puts Duke Nukem Forever to shame.
Coolness and usability factors (Score:2)
Pockets big enough to carry CDs - so seventies
Titanium jewel case to protect the CD in your pocket - expensive, lumpy and painful
Using your iPod to rescue a PC while still listing to your music in front of a drop jawed user. Now that's cool.
Silly silly silly (Score:2)
Slashdot ipod commision? (Score:3, Insightful)
DUH!
Seems like five times a week we see some new story involving "ipods", that really isn't ipod-specfic at all. Does slashdot make a comission off every ipod sold or something?
Otherwise, why be such blatant whores for apple?
Here are some exampmles:
If you have news about the ipod that's actually ipod-specfic, then fine, otherwise PLEASE STOP WHORING A SPECFIC BRAND NAME. THIS IS SLASHDOT, WE ARE SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW WHAT A "MASS STORAGE DEVICE" IS.
Permanent Link to Blog entry (Score:2)
This just in. (Score:5, Funny)
I made an awesome discovery. It just hit me. I could use my iPod layed at just the right angle on top of those papers to keep them from blowing away.
I had done it -- I had invented the first paper weight that could also play music. How did we all survive before iPods. This damn swiss army knife in my back pocket seems so useless now.
Sure, it's no better than a Knoppix CD... (Score:2)
My iPod, however, goes everywhere. This could prove to be a useful secondary function.
Only catch is that, since the iPod lacks a "regular" USB out port, I'd need to have the iPod USB cable with me. That's still easier to carry around than a CD though. While CDs are nice and thin, they've got an awful lot of surface area and don't fit nicely into your pocket.
Re:Ipod = Tricorder? (Score:5, Funny)
Dude, no need to explain what a tricorder is around here ok?
You must be new here
Re:Ipod = Tricorder? (Score:2)
Re:Ipod = Tricorder? (Score:2)
Well, look around at your coworkers. News flash -- actors are usually more attractive the general population.
Lest I be accused of being sexist, feel free imagine the pasty fat guy in the next cube in one of Kirk's trademark ripped uniform shirts.
Re:ERD (Score:4, Informative)
Re:ERD (Score:2)
I agree this doesn't make a whole lot of sense for system admins who should be carrying around (or have handy) a whole toolkit though. When the iPod first came out, I thought that the coolest thing was that I could have my entire system on it and any Mac I encountered could boot my system (rather like the original NeXT idea).
Re:ERD (Score:5, Informative)
Cool, yes. Practical?
The tiny Toshiba drives in the iPods aren't designed for sustained use as a computer's system volume.
You could easily thrash the poor little thing to death doing anything more demanding than playing back MP3's in shuffle mode, and then good luck finding a replacement. There are virtually no 1.8" hard drives available in the end-user market right now, as the demand for new iPods means Toshiba is selling pretty much their entire production runs directly to Apple.
Re:ERD (Score:3, Informative)
I will admit, I'm not an expert on Mac hardware nor OS design, but can a Mac really boot from one device and then transfer the system volumne designation to another device once booted?
Modern OSes are too big to be loaded into memory all at once. I would expect that if you booted a Mac from an iPod drive, the system would have to go back to the iPod occasionally to load device drivers, access
Re:ERD (Score:2)
Ahh...oh, I see....
iPOD... Charger... USB chord
..and almost all computers can boot from a CD ...
Exactly.
Does that mean it's...better? Is it any better?
Well, it's one boot device better, isn't it? It's not a CD. You see, most...most blokes, you know, will be playing at booting from a CD. You're booting Knoppix...all the way up...all the way up...
Yeah...
I don't know....
Nowhere. E
Re:i need some help botting from usb (Score:2, Informative)
You probably can't boot from USB. A few motherboards claim to be able to do it, but very few actually work. I work-on 20 or so computers a week, and I've never seen one that works. Heck, more often than not, CD boot still doesn't even work with the average motherboard. If you buy a nice Asus or Abit, it will work, but the cheap ones I keep running into at work simply won't boot from CD. That means you can't reinstall XP on them. I spend half my time
Re:The cool part is that it still works as an iPod (Score:2)
Re:next restoring option: update to linux? (Score:2)
I was thinking exactly that. This would bring a new meaning to "portable desktop" since the 40gig iPod has more than enough space to store a whole day-to-day use system. Plug it into a "thin client" and
Re:IBM's behind the curve on this one (Score:2)
Nothing like a 11 year old with a computer, I guess. Don't forget to wipe yerself little one...