patrick bourne wrote:
From: "Patrick Bourne" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
Subject: help with installation
Date: Thursday, March 23, 2006 11:23 AM
Hello, I have recently downloaded the businesscard
image for the stable release of the debian OS. Can I
use this version along with Windows 98 or would you
recommend installing debian by itself. I went to the
command prompt and typed - cd D:\debian and it
changed to the D drive which is my CD ROM drive. I
had my installation cd in the drive but I cannot
initiate the installation. The business card release
has 30 MB of data and I put it on a CD. Will this make
a difference.
Patrick
Bourne
If you are unfamiliar with Linux partitionas and filesystems, have a
look at http://newbiedoc.berlios.de/wiki/Debian_basic_features.
If you don't have any important data in your existing Win98
installation, the easiest thing is to remove it and install Win 98 and
Debian from scratch. See
http://www.debian.org/doc/user-manuals#install-sarge.
1. Boot from the Win98 install disc and install Win98 , making the
primary partition less than the size of hard disc. Leave room for a
partition for Debian and a small partition for 'swap'.
2. Boot from the Debian install disc. I prefer to use 'expert26' because
you have more control over installation.
3. During installation, choose to partition the hard disc manually. If
you have a single IDE disc, /dev/hda1 will already exist (Win98). Add a
Linux partition for Debian (/dev/hda2) and a small swap partition
(dev/hda3).
4. The Grub bootloader will be installed automatically. Whenever you
boot in future, the Grub screen will pop up and you can choose which
system to boot.
Hth,
Chris.
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