Okey... I shall try that Wget tomorrow. My aim is to provide a taste of light Linux versions that can enable older machines again, as Windows is a part of the hardware ratrace mafia. You can read a bit more about my project at
http://www. schoolux.org
What Slitaz has done, is that they have made a system, wheras one can download the whole repo as a 2 gig .iso file, that you can run in virtualbox etc. this gives a naive newbee as me a chance to set up a wired or wireless network, whereas people can download a OS and then get acesses to the repo offline.
The experience I have from Africa is that:
There is no such thing as free, fast or stable internet(its very expensive)
Linux can not grow there without files being present locally
The western world has dumped a whole lot off secondary hardware in Africa, falsified as "aid", and there is the resource I would like to use.
My crasy dream is to develope a minibank(ATM) looking kind off device, wheras you can insert a USB memostick and load up a Linux Distro with the programs you like. and then go home and boot:-)
Just as one pulls money out a ATM, I want Africa to be able to pull out a ready configured USB memostick whereas the an example is described here:
A young man owns a 2 gig USB memostick and has acsess to a 128 mb ram computer.
He puts his device into the USB minibank, chooses what operating system he wants, if its a lowram or normal installation, chooses some programs and whooosh... The 2 gig (if low ram is choosen), is configured with a 256mb Swap drive(that are recognized by the operating system and maybe a 768mb off space for the OS and the rest as a NTFS/FAT partition:-)
This would be a really serious revolution as Africa in general is running illegal copys of Windows and have more virus problems than anyone else in the world.
Anyhow... as far as today, this is a dream, but one day there will be a website to organize this project, and if anyone got a seriously good name for that "Linux ATM", I would be very happy to be notified:-)
Best regards
atle