Puppy Linux

Puppy Linux is an operating system and family of light-weight Linux distributions that focus on ease of use and minimal memory footprint. The entire system can be run from random-access memory (RAM) with current versions generally taking up about 600 MB (64-bit), 300 MB (32-bit), allowing the boot medium to be removed after the operating system has started. Applications such as AbiWord, Gnumeric and MPlayer are included, along with a choice of lightweight web browsers and a utility for downloading other packages. The distribution was originally developed by Barry Kauler and other members of the community, until Kauler retired in 2013. The tool Woof can build a Puppy Linux distribution from the binary packages of other Linux distributions.

Puppy Linux
DeveloperBarry Kauler (original)
Larry Short, Mick Amadio and Puppy community (current)
OS familyLinux (Unix-like)
Working stateCurrent
Source modelPrimarily open source
Initial release0.1/ 19 June 2003 (2003-06-19)
Latest release9.5  (FossaPup64) / 17 September 2020 (17 September 2020)
Marketing targetLive CD, Netbooks, older systems and general use
Package managerPuppy Package Manager
Platformsx86, x86-64, ARM
Kernel typeLinux
Default
user interface
JWM / IceWM + ROX Desktop
LicenseGNU GPL and various others
Official websitewww.puppylinux.com
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