Web Pages Related to Linux and/or m68k
All pages are in the United States unless otherwise noted, and
they are in English unless the description is not in English.
This is the Web on Linux...
Linux/m68k
Ongoing Linux/m68k Ports
- Joe Pranevich has set up a page for the Linux/m68k for Macintosh
Project. If you want to see Linux on the m68k-based Macintoshes,
help them out!
- Alan Cox (yes, the one of www.uk.linux.org fame) has also set up a page about Linux on the
Mac (running, naturally, on a Mac). [United Kingdom]
- Pekka Pietikäinen has set up a page about the port to Sun 3 workstations.
[Finland]
- Richard Hirst has a page devoted to his VMEbus port, which
works on several m68k-based VME single-board computers from BVM,
Motorola and Tadpole. [United Kingdom]
- Peter De Schrijver is working on a port to the Apollo Domain
workstations. His current work can be found here. [Belgium]
- The port to the NeXT workstation now has its own page.
- Some actual NeXT code (booting on at least some NeXTs) is at Zach Brown's site.
- The Q40/Q60 port has its own site.
- Somewhat related to Linux/m68k is the APUS
project, which is porting LinuxPPC to Amigas with PowerPC processors.
Ongoing Linux/m68k Projects
- Frank Neumann has set up a page about Debian/m68k, the port of the Debian distribution to Linux/m68k. [Germany]
- The OSIS (Atari TOS and other Atari-based OS emulation project)
has a page. [Sweden]
- There is some documentation by Geert about the universal framebuffer
device at the XFree86 site.
- There is now an attempt to port Linux to 680x0-based machines
without MMUs. See the Microcontroller Linux page for details. [Canada]
- There is a
page about the Permedia2 (CybervisionPPC/BVisionPPC)
framebuffer driver. [Italy]
- Stefan Reinauer has developed amiga-fdisk,
a partitioning tool for the Amiga. [Germany]
Linux/m68k Pages in languages other than English
General Linux pages
- The Debian GNU/Linux Home
Page, the home of the Debian distribution (with official m68k
support) on the web.
- Red Hat Software doesn't
officially support Linux/m68k yet, but never say never...
- The ext2fs utilities home page, created by ext2fs guru Theodore Ts'o.
- The Linux Software Map,
your guide to finding the sources you need.
- www.linux.org was recently
revamped with a completely new layout.
- Linux.com is a relatively new
community portal, sponsored by VA Linux Systems.
- The Linux WebWatcher is a
good place to keep an eye on what's been updated lately.
- Linux International's Home Page.
LI is non-profit organization supporting Linux development.
- Daily Linux-related news nuggets are available at slashdot.org and freshmeat.
- Check out KernelNotes,
your one-stop resource for kernel information.
- LinuxNOW is an interesting
exercise in PR, if nothing else :-)
- Some Linux information is available at www.uk.linux.org. [United Kingdom]
- Linux page at University of Helsinki, with current version numbers of the main
kernel tree. [Finland]
- Visit the home of the quasi-official Linux logo.
- There is a page about NetTools,
part of the basic Linux networking software. [Germany]
- The Linux Mall is
dedicated to commercial Linux products.
- Linux Journal and Linux Magazine are the
monthly magazines of the Linux community in the U.S.
- The AltOS pages
cover a variety of operating systems, including Linux.
- Gerd Knorr has put together a page of framebuffer
resources.
- A good directory of Linux resoruces is The
Open Directory, sponsored by Netscape.
General m68k Pages
Suggest a new link for this page.
Chris Lawrence
<webmaster@linux-m68k.org>
(18 Dec 1999 at 18:34 CST)