Hello Gruessle (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> I am new to Linux and for 2 1/2 days I been trying to install Debian. > Well I have the very basics installed but that is really all I got. > > Now I have Redhat and that is easy to install. > Somewhere I read that it is posible to convert a Redhat install to > Debian. > > I am wondering if that is maybe easyer then installing Debian. No, you cannot "convert" a RedHat installation into a Debian installation. Both systems work differently and for example do not use the same system for software package installation. You can however use parts of the Red Hat configuration with Debian. If you have Red Hat installed, save the /etc directory, then format your linux partitions and install Debian. Some files probably can be used diretly (like the XFree configuration files), others may be helpful because they contain useful information (like the driver modules you need to load for your hardware, e.g. sound and network cards). As you are new to Linux, installing Debian can be quite hard, and you should go to the Debian website and take a look at the documentation there, especially the installation manual and the APT howto. Also, during the installation, /read/ what the installation program tells you. For example, you can install using Kernel 2.4.18, which you probably want to do, but 2.2.20 is default. The installation program can tell you how to use another Kernel. best regards Andreas Janssen -- Andreas Janssen [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP-Key-ID: 0xDC801674 Registered Linux User #267976 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]