Looking for "Freespire" (a free copy of Linspire)?
You've come to the right place...
"Freespire" was the term Andrew Betts gave to a private project he had been working on. The project comprised various open source components, taken from the freely available source repository for the Linspire operating system. Somehow his project got submitted to distrowatch.com as a bona-fide Linux distribution. Andrew found himself confronted with a great deal of confusion surrounding the project, so he quickly changed the name to avoid further misunderstandings. (You can read more about this project at
http://freespire.org.)Andrew's project highlights the spirit of open source software, and it encourages discussion, development, and so on around Linux, which is always a good thing. Linspire completely supports the GPL and the spirit of open source, so projects like this highlight the value and dynamic of the GPL and open source. Linspire has no problem with anyone using the open source code from our operating system – in fact we applaud such projects.
The name Freespire, however, did create some confusion in the short time it was used. The name implies a "free" copy of Linspire, which of course it is not. The very things that were taken out of Linspire for Andrew's project are in fact some of the very things that make Linspire, well...Linspire. One of the main differences between Linspire and other Linux distros (Mandriva, Ubuntu, MEPIS, etc.) is that Linspire does include a lot of legal and paid-for 3rd-party licenses for things like mp3, Java, Flash, Quick Time, Windows Media, Bitstream fonts, Real media, music, etc., and this is all pre-loaded, tested and ready to use. Take all that away and you don't have Linspire, you have something more like other Linux distros. So you see, the term Freespire (free + Linspire) is actually an oxymoron and would be a term like VanillaChocolateCake, where you take out all the chocolate.
Andrew has decided to change the name of his project to 'squiggle' to avoid any confusion.
The only true "Freespire," would need to be a FREE COPY of the real LINSPIRE. We thought it would be fun, for all of those who were looking at this project to experience a true "Freespire", to give away a free digital copy of Linspire for a few days! This is actually a great way to highlight what it is that makes Linspire special and unique, and different from other Linux distributions.
For the next few days, you can obtain a free digital copy of Linspire by following the instructions below.
Hurry! This truly "free” Linspire offer ends September 6th, 2005!Get It NOW Step 1: Redeem the Coupon Click the “Get it Now” button above
Click on "Order" button for Linspire Five-0
Click the "Buy Digital" button
Click the "Apply Coupon" button in the shopping cart
Enter "freespire" (without the quotes) and click the "Update" and "Continue" buttons
Check out of the shopping cart
Create a My.Linspire account
Step 2: Download the Software Click on the My Products>CD Downloads menu on the left side of the screen
Select the ISO you want to download from our servers or via BitTorrent (Linspire Five-0)
Download it to your hard disk, then burn an installation CD using any modern CD-burning software (e.g. Nero, K3B)
Once you've got the install CD, you'll be able to run Linspire from that CD without installing to a hard drive (we call this running in "Live CD" mode), or you can install to a partition.
If you need further assistance, please see
http://linspire.com/installhelp I just did it and downloading my copy right now for free. Make sure you follow the steps above, no credit card or anything needed.