Hi Chris, amazed you could bear to use cygwin for so long. what are your problems with the acx100 driver? I have had no problem compiling the most recent CVS versions on my debian system. Unfortunately for me the driver simply doesn't work (the acx111 chip is not fully working yet). I found that compiling a separate module for a 2.4.x kernel works easier than compiling the 2.6.x versions 'in tree'... James
--------------------------------------------------------- James Ferrando http://www-zeus.desy.de/~ferrando Glasgow ZEUS Group --------------------------------------------------------- On Wed, 21 Apr 2004, Christopher De Vries wrote: > I didn't know if anyone would be interested in my experiences as many many > people have installed debian on Dell 8200s before, but I thought I would share > my experience. I would describe myself as fairly knowledgable about linux... I > first installed RedHat 4.2 on a gateway desktop I got in 1997, and have since > installed debian woody on my home and work desktops. I bought a dell inspiron > 8200 about 2 years ago and considered several times installing debian, but I > didn't because of the Nvidia video driver issue and the fact that cygwin was > working reasonably well for me. My laptop crashed about once a week and two > weeks ago it crashed three times in the same day, so I decided to try the new > debian installer for sarge. > > First, I used Belarc Advisor (a free as in beer, not freedom tool) to get a > profile on the laptop... it generates a good system report. You can get the > tool from http://www.belarc.com/free_download.html . It was mostly an > unnecessary step, but it came in handy when I was trying to remember what video > driver I had been using. > > The sarge installer was very good... the only stumbling block for me was the > partitioning tool... I found it slightly unintuative to use. The defaults it > uses are fairly good and not insane like Dell's preinstalled linux partitioning > under RedHat (2.5 Gig for /home on a 50 gig hard drive?) I went for the > simplest package selection scheme available, and if I had it to do over again I > might just start by installing linux standard base and then adding more as I > needed it, but as it was I selected several categories and installed a bunch of > things. > > I ran into a couple of things which newer users might have found frustrating > after installing sarge: > > 1. X wouldn't work because I needed to install nvidia-glx and nvidia-kernel-*, > so I used apt-get to install them, but they are in non-free and non-free wasn't > included in /etc/apt/sources.list by default. I added non-free loaded the > nvidia drivers and X started up beautifully. > > 2. I wanted to try gnome... I started using X in the early 90s on a Sparc, and > picked twm as the window manager I would use... I have spent the last 12 years > perfecting my .twmrc file, so I thought it might be a good time to take a step > into the new millenium and try gnome. I had gnome-session 2.4.2-2 installed, > and gdm running, but gnome was not an option from the login screen. I tried > updating and upgrading the system, but gnome-session 2.4.2-2 was held back from > upgrading... I did a reinstall of gnome-session and 2.4.2-4 was installed. That > did the trick and added gnome. I have since returned to using twm... Gnome > looks great, but I am a lazy bastard. > > I'm sure point 2 will work fine once sarge becomes the stable release, but I > was a bit confused. > > Everything that came with the laptop is working fine... better than it was when > running Windows (not a single crash since the install). I have also connected > my ipod and used GNUpod with it (it worked well, but I corrupted my itunes > db... it pays to read documentation). I also connected a digital handycam and > can read images and movies off the memory stick, though streaming audio and > video are still inaccesible. I like the new installer and think if the > partitioning section gets some more instructions or just becomes easier to > manipulate then it will be great. The one thing I have not managed to get > running is my D-LINK DWL-650+ pcmcia wireless card. It has an acx100 chip, for > which a driver exists (acx100.sourceforge.net), but I have not managed to > compile it. > > Anyway, if anyone has any detailed questions let me know... there are many > sites out there that deal with installing linux on dell 8200s and some of them > were usefull... some even deal specifically with installing debian... it seems > that as time goes by linux is getting easier to install. > > Chris > > -- > Christopher H. De Vries Phone: (617) 496-7636 > Postdoctoral Fellow FAX: (617) 495-7345 > Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > 60 Garden Street MS-42 > Cambridge, MA 02138 cfa-www.harvard.edu/~cdevries/ > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]