At the bottom of this post is a description of my last attempt at 'cloning' my old system to my new machine. I put 'cloning' in quotes because it's not really that, otherwise I could just use 'dd'. The procedure left me with a system that seemed fine until I tried to run kdm. The system did this without complaint but gave only a blank screen on Terminal 7.
Here is my setup: toshiba satellite 1135 with: 30GB disk debian etch lots of applications toshiba satellite a305-s6857 with: 320GB disk vista My goal is to install etch alongside vista (dual boot) and to copy as many of my applications as I can from my old disk to the new, as opposed to re-installing them from the debian repository. Any suggestions highly appreciated. My research on this turns up only examples where people are doing a true cloning via 'dd,' which is clearly not applicable to my situation because I want to retain vista and because of hardware differences. tom arnall arcata ************************************ LAST ATTEMPT, WHICH FAILED TO SET UP KDM PROPERLY I want to put linux on a new computer, without having to rebuild all my applications. Following are the steps I plan to take: Install a base system with the same network installer disk which I used for the source machine and without getting anything from the network. Copy to the new machine from old with: su mount /dev/sda3 /sD cp -dRvpu / /sD (actually, I copied directories individually, skipping /dev and of course /sD) The drive on the new machine is bigger and of a different brand. For the copy, the new drive is attached to the old machine as a usb drive. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]