CrunchBang Linux 9.04.01
Installation & Desktop
CrunchBang Linux is a Live CD version of LInux so you can burn it to a CD, pop it into your computer, boot up and try it without having to install it.
After you boot into CrunchBang Linux as a Live CD you may be taken aback if you are used to seeing Gnome or KDE. Instead of the usual desktop glory you’ll see a black and white desktop environment that is about as sparse as sparse can get. Don’t worry too much though as you can easily change your wallpaper and make CrunchBang Linux’s default black desktop into something a bit more colorful. Just right-click the desktop then choose Preferences then Choose Wallpaper.
CrunchBang Linux also displays some interesting and dynamic system information on your desktop such as:
Host
Uptime
RAM
Swap Usage
Disk Usage
CPU Usage
And you’ll also see a list of shortcut keys that cover a number of useful things such as:
Run Dialog
Alt Menu
Main Menu
Client Menu
Terminal
File Manager
Editor
Media Player
Web Browser
Graphics Editor
Clock
Lock Screen
Volume Control
System Update
Logout
Screenshot
To launch applications just use the Shortcut Keys listed on the desktop or simply right-click your desktop to open a menu. From there you can launch whatever application you want or you can opt to install CrunchBang Linux to your desktop.
Despite the differences in desktop appearance between regular Ubuntu and CrunchBang or even Linux Mint and CrunchBang, CrunchBang is still Ubuntu. So you get all of the advantages of Ubuntu but just without the desktop bloat of KDE or Gnome.
Installing it is no more difficult than installing any other version of Ubuntu. My install took just a few minutes and I had no problems with it.

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(14 votes, average: 4.50 out of 5)
Hey Jim! I guess “great minds do think alike after all”! Wow, the first thing I read this morning is about a fresh review of Crunchbang (#!) Linux, only hours after I suggested it! Terrific!
Only one minor comment: I found a typo, mentioning Linux Minut” (a new, cutting edge French distribution, perhaps) instead of Linux Mint? :-) Morning humor, perhaps, oh ho! :-)
Glad to hear that 9.04.01 does indeed benefit from the recent Ubuntu speed improvements; I suspected that may be the case. Now I have to go out and grab a copy and try it out myself.
Thanks for the quick review! Based on what you’ve said, and based on my tests of the previous release, this release justifies another fresh look at this distro – maybe in my Virtualbox setup.
Glad you liked the review, Brian. I’d definitely stick it in VirtualBox and have fun with it.
Hmmm…I see no typo. I believe you are mistaken there. Look again.
I never do typos. Noooooo, not me.
Here in Virtualbox on Debian Lenny, running TWO Virtualbox instances, one with antiX in one window, another (this one) with Crunchbang Linux, and a Seamonkey nightly instance running on another desktop in Lenny.
It took less than ten minutes to download Crunchbang, and less than that to start it up. I cleaned out my cup, poured a cup of green tea, then Crunchbang was up and running, and in the meantime, Lynch even decided that he had not scooped the world with Linux Minut – it really WAS Mint after all!
Nice fast distro here, worth running and giving it a look!
Thank you for a great review!
Welcome to DLR, Phillip. Nice job on CrunchBang.
I dont believe OpenOffice should be installed by default on any distro. It takes 10 seconds to install it from synaptic if its needed. Use the space on the CD for something more important that more people actually use.
Minimalistic distros like CrunchBang are where its at. If I wasn’t so happy with my Debian with Fluxbox, I’d switch to CrunchBang. Overall they are very similar. CrunchBang would be an easier way to go.
Don’t obsess over how you desktop looks just get to work! Go with a minimalistic desktop!
You guys might want to check out this thread in the forum:
http://desktoplinuxreviews.com/forum/index.php?webtag=DLRFORUM&msg=77.1
It’s about the issue of minimalism versus bloat on the desktop.
CrunchBang deserves the praises you sang. The review, however, could have been more balanced if you had discussed the downside. Not least is that CrunchBang’s minimalist approach, achieved mainly through the use of Openbox, sacrifices functionality and ease of use for simplicity and speed. To cite two examples, one cannot display programmes or launchers on the desktop and configuring the menu isn’t exactly a cinch. Let’s face it. There are other distros (e.g.,Puppy Linux and Antix) that are leaner and faster than CrunchBang but offer the eye-candy that many are not ready to give up.
Thanks for the comment, windmonger. I’ll add Puppy and Antix to my list for later review.