In 1999
Linuxcare employee Duncan MacKinnon proposed the idea of producing and distributing such a card for an upcoming tradeshow. He and his team of volunteers (fellow employees) coined the phrase "bootable business card". The premiere version was available at the first
LinuxWorld Expo in
San Jose, California. The initial press run produced 10,000 copies. Most of those were given away at the show and shipped to Linux users groups in the ensuing months. Since the project consisted of
open source and
free software, and the idea was compelling and simple, a number of other Linux BBCs rapidly became available. The first derivative was produced by the Irish Linux Users Group. Over the years, most of the creators of the original Linuxcare BBC left the company, but have continued to work on the project which is now called the
LNX-BBC. At least one of the boxed
Red Hat Linux packages included a system rescue CD in business card form factor. Many derivatives and clones of the BBC have proliferated. Almost all of these run on
PCs. Limited success has been achieved on BBCs and Live CDs on other computing platforms. The early versions of the Linuxcare BBC were collections of packages that had been precompiled for other distributions (such as
Debian and
Red Hat Linux from which subsets of files were copied into the directory from which the BBC was "mastered" (the
ISO 9660 CD images were built). Building the entire mini-distribution from source code was the major undertaking of the LNX-BBC project (which formed of the original Linuxcare members with other contributors and volunteers). The first version of the LNX-BBC that was independent from Linuxcare was 1.618 (a number suggested by team member Seth Schoen, an approximation of the
golden ratio, or
phi (φ), and a tribute to
Donald Knuth who uses successively more precise approximations of
π for versioning his
TeX typesetting system). Beginning with version 2.0, all LNX-BBC discs are built entirely from source code using the GAR system. This version was used by the
Free Software Foundation as their membership card (given sponsoring members for their donations). More recently, the 50 MB
Damn Small Linux can be put on BBCs. There have also been "BBC" releases of other free operating systems such as
FreeBSD. ==Operation==