> 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, > then getting them with apt-get. I stopped using dselect a long time ago. My typical apt usage consist of things like: apt-get update apt-cache search apache apt-get install apache apt-get update apt-get dist-upgrade apropos apt and man them. For Helix GNOME, you simply add one line to your /etc/apt/sources.list, apt-get update, and atp-get install three "pseudo" packages (one is for the main stuff, one is for the dev stuff, and I forget what the other is for). These pseudo packages depend on the real Helix GNOME packages, so apt auto-installs the dependent packages. HTH, D PS: Recently, I had to do some "rpm" stuff on a Mandrake box. Wow. apt really has spoiled me. "bar.rpm depends on foo.rpm" Just friggin' install foo.rpm for me then!!! * On Wed, Aug 16, 2000 at 03:09:51PM +0000, Nathan Saper wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > 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 > was a breeze. Apt-get is amazing. But I do have a few problems with > Debian: > > 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 > something that should be included in the base install. That's just one > example; there are others. > > 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. > > 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, > then getting them with apt-get. > > Just my first impression. Debian certainly seems to be a cleaner system, > but Redhat's definitely easier to set up. > > - -- > > Nathan Saper > natedog@well.com (PGP) > nsaper@sprintpcs.com (cell phone, no PGP) > http://www.well.com/user/natedog/ > PGP Key ID: 9AD0F382 > PGP Key Fingerprint: 743D FE2C 7F2E 7CAE 4A5F 0B19 D855 B205 9AD0 F382 > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.0.1 (GNU/Linux) > Comment: pgpenvelope 2.9.0 - http://pgpenvelope.sourceforge.net/ > > iD8DBQE5mq7H2FXyBZrQ84IRAuVLAKC/CeaDjPtpiGbjKVYdMKI1Ip3lkgCgj0Mk > 18QXF70oQbWUG/laRSHB+dY= > =lQ17 > -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----