-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On 2014-03-19 23:02, Steve Litt of Troubleshooters.Com wrote:
> I have a specific set of secrets: > > * Use the network installer, Did CLI (ncurses) mode, Was not sure what these were but discovered that I did use CLI but not ncurses. Expert Install Did > * But mostly choose the defaults Did > * Install the Stable version Did > * Tell it to include the nonfree repos Did not, but ending up installing the ones I needed anyway. > * Install a very small system working, then use apt-get to expand > ..I don't even install X during the install After trying to do it all at once, as I had done for sarge, etch, lenny and squeeze, I did as you now suggest, getting an CLI system working then adding the rest in succession. Doing so took the majority of the time because various combinations would not work together, such as LVM on top of RAID1. Each one would work alone but not together. Trying them together broke the installer. If I have time I will describe this problem in an installation report. > * Use a robust, lightweight desktop like Xfce, LXDE, or Openbox Ended up with kde-trinity which I have been using since squeeze. It is not perfect, but what is? > * Install networkmanager. I'm no longer man enough to use > wpasupplicant or iwconfig wicd was good enough. In the one and only box so far where I have wheezy I do not need wireless. > * Early, install synaptic. Much easier than CLI apt-cache search. Didn't bother. Have been using apt-cache and the other apts. I am used to them so why change? > * Don't use brand new hardware. Here I did not have any choice. This wheezy was in a new computer and I had to go with what the suppliers import into Thailand. The parts I acquired would not have been my first choice. Components in the box are: Gigabyte GA-Z87Z-WIFI, Intel i5-4670K processor with integrated GPU, 2 Corsair DDR3 Non-EEC CL9 DIMM (2x4GB) which I hope will be enough, 2 Seagate Barracuda 7200.14 2TB SATA 6Gb"s 6200RMP 64mb cache for RAID1, which I also hope will be enough, and a Thermaltake 650W gold power supply. This setup had features which I do not expect ever to use such as overclocking and built in wireless for peripherals and connection to the ISP. Because of space restrictions I needed a mini-itx board; that Gigabyte one was the only one available. All these parts fit in a Lian-Li mini-itx case. I looked at off-the-shelf computers, but I was not impressed. One thing about Thailand though, Microsoft cannot coerce suppliers to use their operating systems (and pay for them). Off the shelf computers here will have either no operating system at all, freedos, or linux. I saw some with slackware and ubuntu. If you really are stupid enough to want Microsoft and you are an international company you are pretty well forced to buy it. If you are an ordinary person and want it, you use a bootleg copy. Consequently open source has a higher market share here than in more "sophisticated" parts of the world. > About that last point: The next time I get new hardware, I'll try > Debian Stable first, but if the hardware is newer than the drivers > in Debian Stable, I'll use Xubuntu, and then a year later go to > Debian Stable. I think having new hardware newer than available drivers probably did contribute to some of my problems. I did not however want to try something new like one of the buntus, even though they are based on Debian; so I stuck with wheezy. I did find that using a kernel from wheezy-backports, linux-image-3.10-0.bpo.3-amd64, seemed to make a difference. Regards, Ken -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux) iEYEARECAAYFAlMq7h0ACgkQlNlJzOkJmTe8nACdFFH6uZvG1z91doArnFddKXb4 NEoAnR8mPRQUQ0yZJWEsUe4QM1dlQL6o =O8DY -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/532aee1d.4010...@teksavvy.com