This is a discussion on Diary of a Sarge install within the Debian Linux support forums, part of the Debian Linux category; --> Chris wrote: > In article <T8KdnVCYZ5UrFdPenZ2dnUVZ_smdnZ2d@rcn.net>, Robert Glueck > <rglk@web.de> writes >>I hadn't realized, Chris, that you're poised halfway ...
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| Chris wrote: > In article <T8KdnVCYZ5UrFdPenZ2dnUVZ_smdnZ2d@rcn.net>, Robert Glueck > <rglk@web.de> writes >>I hadn't realized, Chris, that you're poised halfway between Windows XP >>and Linux, testing the waters and perhaps wanting to make the >>transition. In such a situation, why don't you start out with an easy >>Debian distro such as Ubuntu/Kubuntu or Mepis which are quite >>user-friendly and save a transition to straight Debian for later, if at >>all. > > Partly because I am attracted by the pure non-commercial nature of > Debian, which makes it the extreme opposite of Windows and hence defines > the other end of a continuum. > > Also - I thought it would be better to concentrate on one distro from > the start - so as not to have to unlearn details of configuration. I have done many installs on several differnent PC's and I have always had to use dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xfree86. It hasn't mattered in my experience which kernel except when dealing with my DVD/CD burner, which is an internal IDE drive. The kernel 2.4 requires you to lie and make it look like a scsi drive. The first problem was I couldn't get anyone to give the info on how to actually do this. I did, however, get the suggestion to try 2.6 because it directly supported the drive. They were correct. I have successfully burned CD's and DVD's. The burn app even launches automagically when I insert blank media (just like windows stuff, but for free). The only thing I still missing in the Linux world is an Open Source app that can replace Microsoft Access. I have been using PostgreSQl database and it is great, but there is no database access forms packages like Access gives you. |
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| In article <434ec613$0$49019$14726298@news.sunsite.dk>, Madhusudan Singh <spammers-go-here@spam.invalid> writes >Chris wrote: >> I'm trying yet another install of Sarge, this time starting >> with: >> "boot: linux26". >You do *not* need to reinstall. >Debian is an install once, upgrade forever type of distro, as I am newly >fond of saying. I agree with you - up to a point. Fixing problems is for experts: clean installing is for beginners. Even with Windows, it can sometimes be so difficult to diagnose a problem that doing a clean install is more time-efficient. Diagnostic skill is very rare - and diagnosis needs a lot of background knowledge ... without such knowledge one would not be able to frame reasonable hypotheses to test. A benefit of clean installing is the firm anchor of a known starting point. -- Chris |
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| >> Oh good! I'm trying yet another install of Sarge, this time starting >> with: >> "boot: linux26". >> Is the 26 kernel likely to be better for me? >I know I like the 26 kernel. I think it should work w/ the harware you >mention as well It is working fine - and I liked the set-up wizard that came up at the end of the install. -- Chris |