Hi Everyone, I was trying to follow John Paul Adrian Glaubitz instructions for installing Debian 10 on a PowerMac G5. The instructions are at https://lists.debian.org/debian-powerpc/2021/02/msg00011.html. The instructions say to forgo the reboot after installation and perform some extra steps.
At the end of the installation, the last screen told me a reboot was needed. The last screen gave me two choices - <Continue> or <Go Back>. I selected <Continue> because I had the extra steps to perform. I planned on reboot after performing the extra steps. <Continue> unexpectedly rebooted the machine and I lost the chance to perform the extra steps. (Now I'm stuck at an OpenFirmware prompt that results in a kernel load failure/corrupt image error message for every command I enter. Sigh...) >From a UX perspective, the last screen has a lot of opportunity for improvement. There's no indication what <Go Back> does or where it "goes back" to. It is also not clear that "going back" does not undo the most recent steps performed by the installer. Finally, there's no indication <Continue> will immediately reboot the machine. I believe the last screen should say something like: Installation is complete. A reboot is required. If you select <Yes> then a reboot will happen now. If you select <No> then you will have to manually reboot later. Would you like to Reboot now? <No> <Yes> Changing the text on the last screen will dramatically improve the UX experience. It tells the user what is going to happen. It also offers the user a chance to avoid the reboot . Jeff