On Wed, Aug 16, 2000 at 03:09:51PM +0000, Nathan Saper wrote: > OK, so I finally got my laptop back from the repair shop yesterday, and, > too my obvious horror, my Linux partitions had been deleted, and I just > had one big fat Win95 install. Vowing to make the best of the situation, > I decided to try Debian, instead of just reinstalling Redhat. I made the > 17 install disks for 2.2, booted up, and started downloading. The install It's much easier if you already have a Linux box on the network, so you can use NFS to install the "base" file. > 1) The default install has some obvious things missing. (I did the > default install cus I was feeling lazy.) For one, it's missing important > devel libraries, such as the ncurses static libraries. This seems like You can choose development stuff, that's one of the choices when it asks you for what category of stuff you want before running dselect. > 2) Doesn't configure X during install. This doesn't bother me, > but I can see where a new user would be pretty freaked just looking at a > command prompt. I can remember it running XF86Config (the shell script that asks questions about your hardware). And if you install xdm, it should come up into X automatically after a reboot, without further intervention. It might be better if it offered to run XF86Setup instead of XF86Config though. But if you only chose the minimal install, I don't think that includes X. > > 3) Dselect is weird. This is just a personal thing; I know some people > love dselect, but I'm having issues with it. For example, even if I tell > it to just grab one package, it ends up wanting to grap 35mb worth of > shit. What I'm doing right now is just using dselect to find packages, Well selections are persistent; if you select something and it has dependencies, then even if you deselect the thing which triggered all the dependencies, the dependencies still stay selected, and exiting dselect (however rudely, even kill -9) and coming back in won't change it, either. That's annoying. And its key-mappings are weird. Like the way it offers help too often, and then makes you hit space to exit... space is not a natural thing you'd think of to exit anything. Hopefully the graphical alternatives will be mainstream in a couple more years. I recently re-installed Slackware 3.0 on an old machine because I wanted to try to compile a 1.2 kernel (long story)... talk about a fast and easy install, and compact too! I installed everything I needed to compile a kernel, and 2 versions of the kernel source, on an 80 meg partition and still had room left over. dselect is slow on old 486's because it's written in Perl, at least that's my theory. -- _______ Shawn T. Rutledge / KB7PWD ecloud@bigfoot.com (_ | |_) http://www.bigfoot.com/~ecloud kb7pwd@kb7pwd.ampr.org __) | | \________________________________________________________________ Get money for spare CPU cycles at http://www.ProcessTree.com/?sponsor=5903