What is it?
Debian GNU/Linux — or simply “Debian” — is an operating system. An operating system is the “central” software in a computer, on top of which all the other applications will run. Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X are two well known proprietary operating systems.
Debian GNU/Linux has two fundamental differences with these proprietary operating systems:
Debian GNU/Linux is a free software (think of free as in freedom, not as in free beer). This means that the software included in Debian can be freely used, modified and redistributed by anyone. Incidentally, this means that Debian can be downloaded for free. Debian is developed by a community of thousands of developers and users which work cooperatively, mainly through the Internet. Some are volunteers, some are academics, others work for companies which have understood the technical and strategic interest of free software. The free software community resembles the scientific community in many ways: both share the goal of contributing to the common good, and both routinely pratice sharing of ideas and products to reach that goal.
- Debian GNU/Linux is an operating system, but it is also much more than that: it is a collection of several dozens of thousands of softwares. No need to go through several websites to get an office suite from there, a web browser from there, a numerical computing environment at another place, and to familiarize yourself with various installation procedures. With Debian, all these softwares, and many more, are freely accessible with a few clicks from a uniformized dowload interface (the package manager, see below).
Among all these softwares, many are directly useful for the researcher in economics. Actually, all the sofware that an economist would need for its daily job are in Debian, whether for producing theoretical or quantitative results or for communicating these results through article or presentation typesetting.
The objective of the present endeavour is to provide a easy way for researchers and students to try free software. This is done by providing a pre-installed virtual machine image, so there is no need to repartition your hard drive.
Get it
Download the virtual machine image
You need to know if your system is 32-bit or 64-bit. If unsure, choose 32-bit.
Also, you have the choice between English and French.
Language / System |
32-bit |
64-bit |
English |
||
French |
Beware, the image is big, around 2.5Gb.
Install Virtualbox
Download and install Virtualbox (version 4) on your system.
Configure the virtual machine in Virtualbox
Run Virtualbox. Then, click “Import appliance” in the “File menu”. Choose the Debian image that you downloaded (it has the .ova extension). Then you will be prompted for various settings of the virtual machine: if unsure, just accept the defaults.
Your Debian machine should now appear in the list of virtual machines. Just double click it to run it!
Customize the keyboard layout
The English image is pre-configured with an American QWERTY keyboard, and the French image is pre-configured with a French AZERTY keyboard.
If you are using a different layout, go to the “System” menu on the top of the screen, then go to “Preferences” and then “Keyboard”. Click on the “layout” tab, and choose your favourite layout from the list. Back to the list of installed layouts, delete the layout that you don’t use.