This probably isn't proper form, kosher or even cool... but... It's a quick way around the problem.
Hit control-c at the screen, run dselect with ftp as the method {set it in the first dselect screen} and update the system. Alternately, restart the machine, hope it comes back up and do the upgrade from there. It may break your system {tho' it's already broken} but it does work {usually... I'm not making guarantees.}. If the upgrade will work it's a good chance everything will go fine from there on out. I always install the base system with apt-get {dselect, whatever ...You can set up the base system and then just run apt-get update then apt-get upgrade {see the screen for options}} and use the disks for additional packages. Use disk 1 for the base install, upgrade to the latest from the 'net and then start installing applications and so forth. Do it slowly, a package or two at a time, and you should be fine. > But it breaks each time at 'Configuring Locales'. You can select more > locales, but the 'Enter' key will not give an 'accept' - it just sits there. > No key on the keyboard will 'accept', and get me past this. > In fact, after it breaks on the first cycle, the 'Enter' key brings up the > 'Help' menu. > This is using disk 1 - the 'vanilla' kernel. I tried it with bf24 to > see if that helps - it didn't. > > Can't I get a stock version of Linux to run 'out of the box', with decent > speed? I'm not asking a lot, Web access, email, and a functioning floppy > drive... It should be easy and speed should be your least concern. What are you running? What are you installing? > Further, the Debian install doc, which was lovingly detailed up to Chapter > 8, breaks down and does not deal with several of the screen options > presented during setup. Including, of course, the 'Configuring Locales' > option, or any way of avoiding it. > > Can I scream now, or must I wait? I'd suggest a little more patience. Debian's a perfectly good system... Make sure you select debconf in the dselect screen.. ... This message has been brought to you in part by a grant from Columba. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]