I still have my Yggdrasil somewhere in the basement, but I also have my original install of Slackware 2.2.0.1 on the original 50 floppies down there as well. And I know where those are…That was my original installation, complete with kernel 1.2.3, which I immmediately upgraded to 1.2.8…a 4 hour kernel compile on a 386 cpu.
I would doubt, after 20 years, that those floppies are any good any more. I did find a place online that had Slackware 2.2, and I had thought about trying it on a virtual box vm, just to see how a distro that old behaved on modern hardware.
I should dig through the SUSE museum stash. We’ve got order forms, boxes and disks in there dating back to 92-ish. Though that’s not really “mine”. So don’t think I’ll win. But I should post them anyway. Because old stuff is rad.
Well-- it’s an installation CD for linux: Here’s the CD for “Crossover Plugin”. Their original product was a bridge that allowed you to use Windows web browser plugins (like Quicktime) in Linux browsers.
Mine is a RedHat 6.1 disk from 1999, if I remember correctly, but it must in a cupboard at my parents place. I was only 15yo at the time, but it got me hooked instantly.
Some old one i had in my Linux and Mac OS X CD/DVD drawer:
on @bittin on twitter could not add the pic to the post
Debian 2.1
Ubuntu 7.10, 9.04,9.10, 10.4 and 10.10
Kubuntu 9.04, 9.10, 10.04
and OpenSUSE 10.1 and 10.1
and Fedora 22 thats the one i got orginal disks of
rest is a bunch of burned Gentoo and Arch,XBMCbuntu,Kodibuntu and Debian disks etc too
Infomagic 4 CD set containing Slackware 2.2 install, and Debian 0.91/3, plus a load of other stuff like Kernel Sources 1.2.1 and the sunsite.unc.edu archives.