Anthony Towns dijo [Tue, Mar 18, 2008 at 03:39:05PM +1000]: > (...) > and the real question is where you say "if you really want the 23rd CD > for mipsel, you're probably smart/dedicated enough to use jigdo".
I completely agree with this. I don't think we must carry every CD for every arch forever! BTW... 30 CDs are too many CDs. Just too fucking many. We could also cut down on them - i.e. produce only the first 8 CDs per arch, and have the rest only as DVDs. Yes, many people still do not have DVD drives handy, but then again, 8 CDs + network access + a bit of patience for the most obscure bits of software should be enough for anybody... > The other thing we /could/ do is encourage people who've done successful > Debian installs to help contribute by participating in a torrent after > the fact -- you could do all sorts of things like have a FUSE filesystem > that takes a (partial) mirror and a jigdo file and lets you see fake iso > files, which you then seed via bittorrent, eg. You could automate that, > so it's just a question like the popcon one: "Do you wish to participate > as a torrent seed for other people installing Debian? Yes [No]" Ugh. Do you really want ISPs all over the world to start associating Debian with evil communist pirate P2P filesharers? > Hrm. In the real world, does jigdo actually saturate broadband bandwidth? > It's been a long time since I've tried it, but I vaguely remember it > not actually being very speedy. Ah, it was the "stop downloading, add > files to image" that used to slow things down, but seem less of an issue > now. The repeated wgets probably still aren't great for that matter, > since it serialises downloading and establishing connections. It does. I ran Jigdo for i386 DVD 1 some months ago for a person that requested it from me. We have ftp.mx.debian.org in our university network, and I have theoretically a 100Mbps link to it (really it's about 8Mbps, but who am I to complain?). It was a busy night for my router. Greetings, -- Gunnar Wolf - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - (+52-55)5623-0154 / 1451-2244 PGP key 1024D/8BB527AF 2001-10-23 Fingerprint: 0C79 D2D1 2C4E 9CE4 5973 F800 D80E F35A 8BB5 27AF -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]