Yep, that's exactly what it is Calum.
Here are my test results:
Went to the WinLinux web site and filled in "Bill Gates" and "
[email protected]" in the form so I could download the free cut-down version for free. It was a single *.EXE file of about 180MB. I clicked on it and it brought up a Windows installer and proceeded to do a basic UMSDOS installation just as I had suspected. I was actually getting my hopes up as things seemed to be running pretty well and I thought that yes, this might be a good sampler.
It finishes installing the the packages in C:\Linux\winlinux and then popped up with a registration box where you again have to type in a name and email address so again I filled in Billy boys' info. It just sat there for 30 seconds or so and then timed out and the installation exited. It did create the ICON on the desktop and the start menu with the appropriate configuration utility (but you can't run the configuration utility without registering your name and email address).
I realized that the reason it could not register is because I have outbound port 80 blocked at my firewall to force going through my proxy. Now I'm thinking, there is no other Linux distro that I am aware of that forces you to give the distro maker any of your information so I began to get a bad taste in my mouth.
Ok, I decided to try it out without running the config utility so I just clicked on the WinLinux desktop ICON (which just bootstraps the kernel with LOADLIN.EXE, something I used to use years ago, nothing special). Then I begin to see the familiar "RedHat" bootup sequence with the only difference being the red "RedHat" was changed to a yellow "WinLinux". The other difference is the first time you boot it, it must set up the UMSDOS filesystem and install the KDE packages etc so the first boot will take a little while.
Then it just brought me up to a console login prompt, no graphical login, but I expected that since I couldn't run the configuration utility to set up X. So I stuck "root" in at the prompt with no password and was able to log in, create an ID etc.. It had no idea what my network card was and I tried to run xf86config to set up X but didn't have any luck on my first try so I just said that was enough for me. Maybe I'll try again later by temporarily allowing outbound port 80.
So I have mixed emotions about whether to recommend someone else try. As I said, I don't like having to give up any information to them to use a half baked product. But if after entering that information if everything else went as smoothly as the initial setup it might be worth a try for those who just want a "taste" of Linux without repartitioning etc. I would assume you could install RedHat packages on this distro since it appears to actually be a stripped down RedHat.
Other things I can think of that might be better for just a sampler is install Mandrake or RedHat on a UMSDOS partition, it's the same thing without the Windows installer and without having to register. And doesn't Mandrake have a version that you can install using a Windows based installer?
[ February 13, 2002: Message edited by: VoidMain ]