I do hope I'm sending this to the right place. I find everything so
confusing and difficult, here.

On the subject of which:  I can't find anything, anywhere, that tells me
what's on these 20 additional CDs I've taken hours to download and burn
[I'm not on-line with the computer I'm using to try out Etch]. They all
look about the same, when I put the CD in and it opens on my desktop, and
the only things inside the file folders are more file folders, denoted
with letters of the alphabet, which lead to files with all kind of
strange names, only some of which are occasionally familiar (like "java"
and "nvidia" ["Hey! I think I've got one of those!]).

Then there are the questions that will probably forever remain
unanswered, like:  if there are sane frontends, does that mean there are
INsane ones as well, and how can you tell them apart -- before it's too
late? And how about the backends? Would they be crazy, too?

If you haven't guessed it, I'm a rank newbie and a total non-techie. I've
come to realize that Linux is probably well beyond my capabilities, and I
will probably end up having to abandon the enterprise, as anxious as I am
to be rid of "Big Brother" [Microsoft].

I can't figure out how to get any extra programs into my computer,
presuming I can see a list of them, first (preferably with a description
of what the program is/does). The only one I could find to add was Open
Office, because it's on the first disk, and Synaptic offered it to me.
Even that was problematic, as there were several entries to choose from.

If the  "... apt-get blah, blah ..."  command line thingmee is the only
way to do this, then I'll just have to forget it:  even if I didn't have
M.E. (a fatigue disorder), my middle-aged brain simply isn't capable of
dealing with SO much new and totally unfamiliar data at once. It's just
too much.

If there is not a simple way to add programs, could someone then, PLEASE,
have mercy on me and take the time to tell me how to completely uninstall
this Debian program from my computer (including that GRUBby little petard
who took over my computer on the first try and wouldn't let me access my
BIOS, necessitating a very scary "fix" of the "mbr":
"WARNING: Are you SURE you want to do this?!!! Making a mistake, here,
could terminate all known life in the universe."   Well, it said
SOMETHING like that, anyway ... )

The computer I'm using for this is an Intel-type Pentium III (also loaded
with Win 2000), with only 128 megs of RAM. One of my two CD-ROM drives
has ceased to function under Linux, and the only other one is also my CD
burner.

Thanks.

Purple Penny

-- 
We've Got Your Name @ www.mail.com!!!
Get a FREE E-mail Account Today - Choose From 100+ Domains

Reply via email to