> The one item preventing me from trying Debian is the X-Windows > configuration horrors.
Well... I dunno about "horrors" ;-) I think people tend to overstate these things about Debian installation. The thing is, it won't auto-detect your hardware. So that just means you have to edit your XF86Config-4 manually, that's all. If you have a Mac, then it's usually as simple as finding a Linux user that has the same model Mac as you do, and copying-n-pasting parts of their XF86Config-4 into yours. Like I said, it takes a bit of work to get everything working because it won't auto-detect your hardware. But you only have to do it once, and in my opinion... it's really worth it to have a fast, solid Debian system instead of (in my experience) a remarkably easy to install, but notoriously flaky, slow, and "clunky" Red Hat 9 system that's been sloppily ported to PPC. Talk about horrors! If you're running YDL right now, I dare you to try and upgrade KDE to 3.2 ;-) Go ahead, try! (heh heh, good luck!) With Debian, I literally typed "apt-get install kde", and about 20 or 30 minutes later it was done. Sorry to sound like a raving lunatic... it's not like Debian is the Second Coming or anything. It's just that for me, Debian works very reliably where other distros (particularly YDL) did not. > Are there any PPC-oriented FAQs or tips that can > ease one into X on Debian? Not sure about X specifically (just gotta find the specs for your harware and put 'em in your config... not so difficult), but there's lot's of good info on the links on this page: http://www.debian.org/ports/powerpc/ Cheers, Sean -- _________________________________ : : : DataFly.Net : : : Industrial-Strength Web Hosting http://www.datafly.net