Alejandro Lopez wrote:
But I've just come accross this article:
http://www.debianplanet.org/node.php?id=831
entitled "An Unbiased Review of Debian 3.0". They say things like you
are supposed to know the name of your drivers (name of the files, not
the name of the hardware to be supported that usually comes as a
description in a database!). I've been very dissapointed to read this. I
know that people here who have recommended it say they had it running in
little time and effort, but is that due to you having quite some
background?
That's kind of an old article, but regardless, I don't think Debian is
that difficult to install. I've never had to know the names of the
files for drivers for installation. The main thing that confuses some
people is partitioning their hard disk, and the older Debian installers
used fdisk, I think, but they have better partitioning tools now (even
an 'auto' option). If you want Debian, use the newer Debian installer,
it makes Debian installation a snap. If you've got a good fast Internet
connection, I even recommend getting the compact installer -- you
download 2 floppy disk images, burn them to a boot disk and a root disk,
then most of the installation is done via the net. I install all of my
Debian boxes with this method -- you are insured to get the latest from
Debian (if you are foolhardy like me, you can install testing/unstable
to get the bleeding edge stuff):
http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/unstable/main/installer-i386/current…
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When your cat has fallen asleep on your lap and looks utterly
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