There is another way to get Debian potato up and running quickly with a nice GUI install. Just d/l the free 'hail' distro from stormix.com or get their cd and you'll be apt-get'ting in about a half-hour. You can then remove the stormix stuff (admin pkgs) but keep the stormpkg manager for a nice graphical front end to dselect/apt-get. Since the Debian install is daunting this is a good way to introduce newbies to Debian. After they start using Debian this way, then their next 'pure' Debian install is a lot less daunting.
On 05 Oct 2000 15:10:59 -0400, James Antill said: > Christen Welch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > I could see a person new to computers having some problems > > with installing Debian. It isn't the best install in the > > world. However, anyone who has a good understanding of > > computers (by this I don't mean Start->Programs->MS Word) > > should be able to install Debian with little trouble. > > > > I've installed 1.3 and 2.1 on my system. I upgraded from 1.3 > > to 2, then to 2.1, and then was the victim of a hard drive > > death. 2.1 seems to be a lot easier, with the ability to > > choose different installation types. > > I'm pretty new to debian, installed my first machine just over a week > ago now. To be fair it was more rushed than I wanted it to be as the > drive for my old machine was dying and I need to reinstall onto a new > drive fast (I was going to play with it on an old machine for a bit). > > Now I wasn't "daunted" when I sat down (I'd installed NetBSD about 4 > or 5 years ago, and my old machine was an "upgraded" slackware 2 > [running glibc2.1.3 etc.]). > > > I digress. My point is, Debian isn't difficult, even relative > > to the other 'main' Linux based distros out there, to install. > > That's cute, it's loyal, but it isn't _true_. > > I'd done a couple of RH/FreeBSD installs and I pretty much put the CD > in configured a bunch of things and pressed go (FreeBSD has to muck > about in ports which isn't as good as it just being there ... but it > was still less painful than debian). > > Things that "got" me... > > 1. The partioning stuff didn't tell me how to make extended partitions > (I realise _now_ that for cfdisk logical == extended, but I didn't > know then). This could be classified as an upstream problem, if you > assume that debian can't use whatever RH uses. > > 2. Even though I'd changed the default partition setup I didn't change > it much (I just needed a couple of xtra 3 Gig bits on the end for my > old drives and a bigger swap space). But the default partition setup > doesn't make any sense ... it doesn't give a hint of which partition > should be used for which mount ... about half way through the first > install I realised that /var was on / and / was pretty small and so I > probably wasn't goign to be able to get a full install (and if I did > log and cache/apt would be big problems). > > To be fair the above was at about 3 am, I decided to sleep and forget > about it at this point. > So the next day... > > 3. I partitioned properly this time and installed, I didn't really > like they way it would ask me questions while the install was > going. Esp. as I already had working XF86/exim/etc. configs ... but > that was no large pain. However on this second install I'd forgotten > to enable my ethernet card in modconf so I couldn't see my network and > it took me _ages_ to find the "modconf" program. A top level > "deb-conf" which points you at the other *conf programs would have > been a great help. > > 4. A whole bunch of modules are manually loaded into the kernel, is > there a reason for this (not a big thing, but looks wrong). Did I do > something wrong with modconf ? > > 5. So the computer rebooted for the first or second time or whatever, > and it was supposed to have installed everything. Yeh right... bits of > gnome were missing (gdm I remember specifically because when I > manually installed/started it it didn't run a window manager). The > ispell language was set to spanish and english/american hadn't been > installed (the look dictionary was on german and also didn't have > either english or american installed). Traceroute was missing (I had > traceroute6 though... gee thanks). I'd asked for a full development > environment and autoconf/automake/libtool/cvs/gdb were all missing as > were the debug version of the c library and gnome headers. > > 6. There is nothing like rpmfind, eventually I worked out how to do > grep's over /var/state/apt/lists/* to do what I want but it's still > annoying. > > 7. xemacs with gnus with tm doesn't work at all (Ie. "xemacs -f gnus" > dies on load if you have configured gnus to use tm). > > Those were all pretty big annoyances and if I hadn't promised myself > that I would take a serious look at debian after the things I'd heard > about it I'd have probably gone out and bought a RH 6.2 CD. > > 8. After getting the network and ppp setup I diald up the modem (I'm > ona static modem that's dialid up 24/7 and I'd bee AOL for about 14 > hours at this point). I then realised that when I tried to install > stuff it didn't prefer the CD deb lines (I didn't mind so much for > _newer_ versions, but when it's downloading the same version it's > annoying). > > 9. /etc/network/interfaces doesn't support aliases very well, copy > and paste is your friend but (to be fair RH might be just as bad). > > 10 dpkg -S isn't as good as rpm -qf in many cases, and things like rpm > -qif have to be done with multiple commands. > > 11. diald doesn't "just work" if you have ppp configured (in fact I > gave up trying to get it to and just redid the modem config in the > diald sepecific stuff), also "dialid.conf" doesn't inform you that > it's useless because you need to lookin diald.defs and diald.options > as well (my last config for diald only used the .conf file). > > 12. gnome-apt doesn't allow you to de-select a package after you've > selected one (I'm pretty sure gnome-apt is unsupported, but still). > > Having said all that debain _is_ much easier to use _after_ you've > set it up. There've already been a few times when I've done apt-get > install <blah> and I smiled happily. And I'll probably put it on > my other machines, but I doubt I'll recommend it to most people over > RH (unless they can buy it pre-installed). > Which brings me onto my last remark... > > 13. It's very painful to try and mirror debian, even when you have the > 3 binary CD set. There is no apt-mirror package (apt move helps with > moving the files in your apt cache into the right location, but that's > about it). I had to hack up about 3 different versions of a perl > script to get something that was even close to ok (A big gotcha is > that the mirrors don't use symlinks for binary-arch to binary-all so > you download netscape java etc. twice). > I give that to anyone else who wants a copy, but it's still a bit > hacky (you more or less have to put each mirror on a different proFTP > virtual server entry, which is annoying). > > > It could be made better, but it isn't worth not using > > Debian over. > > I'd say that about the after install experience it could still be a > lot better and it's at least as good as anyone else (and if you are > installing a bunch of software it's better) but the install didn't > even compare to RH IMO (and, yes I will try and help fix it), and I've > heard some of the more proprietry like distros are even slicker than RH. > > -- > James Antill -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] > "If we can't keep this sort of thing out of the kernel, we might as well > pack it up and go run Solaris." -- Larry McVoy. -- gEEk||dOOd^Deb+ian&&XFce>everything goes Pronto(-_-)