/boot

2000-10-21 Thread ColdWater
List,

First of all, hi to everyone!
Now...
I've finished my download of CD-Binary 1 and i'm ready to install Debian
Potato. I'm reading the manuals and, after some How-tos I intend to install
it. (Erase the Red Hat and put it on; leaving Win);
I have a little question and I hope someone from the list could help me with
it.
Even with the boot in before the 1024cil,  is it recomended to to create a
/boot partion?
Is it good, bad or it does not matter? What about it's size. 10Mb is enough?

Thanks!
Custodio, L. C. - Brazil!
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Master Debian FAQ (newbie-centric)

2000-10-23 Thread ColdWater
List,

I think that this is a very good and also a great point for people who would
like to try out Debian but think that is very hard to work out with, and
install, also.
If possible, count me in. I would also like to help. And, if there is also
possible to set a specific help on the creation of the FAQ, I would like to
do it with tar.


> 6. Would the Debian main page hold a link to this if it's done well and
tailored
>toward Debian?
If we could talk with them (debian.org) maybe they will put the FAQs on
their page. (and "maybe" in some package).

See yap,
Custodio, L. C.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



- Original Message -
From: "William Jensen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: 
Sent: Sunday, October 22, 2000 5:22 PM
Subject: Idea: Master Debian FAQ (newbie-centric)


> Greetings folks,
>
> As a newcomer to Debian I, like many since I've joined this list, ask
typical
> newbie questions about the some basic things.  If we take a step back and
look
> at the big picture there is a basic group of things new users want to get
> accomplished.  For example most users want to send mail to other people.
While
> we could say to them "go RTFM!" that is hardly what they are asking for.
If
> they did take that RTFM advice...how many of them do you think would stay
> around?  Not a lot likely.  HOWTO's, README's, etc are fine and dandy and
> very informative once you have a base knowledge under your belt and you
can
> appreciate what they are.  But for someone that is "brand new" it is just
> overwhelming.  What I'm getting around to saying is how can we, the Debian
> community, set up some newbie FAQ's that are tailored specifically at the
> very new person trying out linux and doesn't want "every switch" explained
> in detail.  Most people, if I am not mistaken, want easy to understand
> documentation that gets them up and running fast with concrete examples of
> the cmd in action for a variety of "most used" scenarios.  Take the
following
> topics:
>
> email, ssh, http, sound, xwindows, security, word processors, tar
>
> Each one of those topics probably has a handful of "how do I" associated
with
> it that a very new user would "typically" ask to this list.  First off I'd
like
> to ask if someone has already gathered a FAQ like this for Debian.  If
not,
> I'd like to volunteer my time in creating (when I have the knowledge)
parts
> of the FAQ.  Some basic questions come up though and these I throw out to
you,
> the Debian community:
>
> 1. Who would house/display the FAQ so it is always available.
> 2. Who can contribute and how?
> 3. Who does quality control checks?
> 4. How do you submit an article to be included?
> 5. What would be a successful structure/format?
> 6. Would the Debian main page hold a link to this if it's done well and
tailored
>toward Debian?
>
> Again, I'd like to be part of this and am willing do devote some of my
time
> to getting easy to understand documentation out to newbies...of which I
still
> consider myself a member.  I have several other newbie friends that I
provide
> tech support to on linux and most of the time I end up referring them to a
> spot on my home website that I have documented how I was able to get
things
> working for myself.
>
> If your interested in this project or have suggestions please feel free to
> contact me on the list here or privately at [EMAIL PROTECTED]  It would
> be a shame to let all the talent that people on this list have stored in
their
> heads go to waste by being burned out by constant repeats of the same
question.
>
> Regards,
>
> Bill Jensen
>
>
> --
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>