I would like to know what the difference is between these two versions of the same distro.
ubuntu-10.10-alternate-i386.iso
ubuntu-10.10-desktop-i386.iso
I think that the alternative CD is not Live,
but is there any more to it?
I would like to know what the difference is between these two versions of the same distro.
ubuntu-10.10-alternate-i386.iso
ubuntu-10.10-desktop-i386.iso
I think that the alternative CD is not Live,
but is there any more to it?
Yes. The alternate CD comes with all the Ubuntu packages (and so can be used as an upgrade package source by simply running
apt-cdrom add
). The desktop CD has all those packages already installed as part of thesquashfs
image, which is convenient for doing new installations, but unusable for doing upgrades with.The alternate CD installer is not a live CD. You can't use it to try out Ubuntu, test if Ubuntu works or fix a PC/edit partitions without reinstalling.
The alternate CD installer has a command line (curses or similar) installer, whereas the default live CD has a user friendly graphical installer.
The alternate CD can be used to upgrade your Ubuntu version. This is useful for offline computers.
The download size is another difference, which might be important for some users:
I give examples here for Lubuntu (based on Ubuntu) in 2018 because Lubuntu is targeted for older or low-specs devices. Where size might matter even more.
Desktop: 1090 MBytes http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/releases/18.04/release/lubuntu-18.04.1-desktop-i386.iso
Alternate: 715 MBytes http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/releases/18.04/release/lubuntu-18.04-alternate-i386.iso