I purchased a copy of that at my University's bookstore in 1999 or early 2000. As someone else mentioned, the Tux inside was a small stress ball type thing - it probably degraded over the years, I recall mine eventually falling apart.
Con un hard disk SCSI, tenia sentido montar un servidor SAMBA, y en ciertos casos cambiar Novell por Corel Linux, lo malo es que aun usaba LILO (Linux loader) el cual era muy limitado si querias instalar Linux y Windows en un mismo disco duro....
I've never seen this OS. But, from the Russian magazine "Xakep", I heard about FreeBSD, which, surprisingly, still remains an "unpopular" and completely free OS with incredible potential.
I have an android so i can play emulated games anytime I want. Psp, ds, gba. Currently playing Soul Silver cause I am not paying $100 for a cartridge with no box.
MBR2GPT works, although it may require some preboot commands (diskpart, bcdboot etc.) This is useful because future iterations of Windows (23H2) require secureboot to be enabled for install. This requires legacy ROMs to be disabled. Also, adding REG_DWORD in HKEY Local\System\Setup\MoSetup bypasses unsupported hardware prompt.
Battery's can only be shipped on a boat as they are highly dangerous. I know that business can get them shipped. I don't know if the consumer can, tho.
OMG unattended Windows installs now that brings back memories. I worked in a huge school and we had loads of different brand PCs and until I arrived no one had ever imaged them. I got around this to start with by setting up my own XP install. I used a DVD and had the unattended install Windows (obvs) Adobe Creative Suite Master Office 2003 All the little utils you'd need like Shockwave, Flash, Quicktime, Java etc Managed to fill a DVD-R it took awhile to do an install but it was a lot easier than manually installing and faster too as you could wander off and fix something else.
I remember using the OS at the time. Some specialized magazines used to come with installation CD-ROMs, and that's how I met this OS. Was a good way to study web development while having a shared family computer... since it came with a very easy UI. My mom (77 now) - for example - never even learnt Windows... thx to OSes like this. The real difficulty was usually configuring some shady hardware (had to compile a lot) and translations. I think this is still a problem today for some distros, although a lot more rare. I think I ran it for a few months, then I switched to Xandros... then switched back to Debian again. Very nostalgic video. === edit: Oh! You've mentioned Xandros... nice.
The Hyper Base FC is kinda interesting, but RetroArch is kind of a terrible emulator for a lot of consoles past like, the N64. Not sure why they couldn't have included a few other specialized emulators, but hey, it's a clone console, nobody was expecting quality from these things.