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RE: Taking the Plunge-- Still: msg#00485user-groups.linux.kansascity
> -----Original Message----- > From: jmneedham > Sent: Thursday, October 30, 2003 4:09 PM > To: Kris Bodenheimer > Cc: kclug-3DadQFcgQnvYtjvyW6yDsg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: Taking the Plunge-- Still > > > Hi guys: > > Thought Gentoo would be cool,but I am obviously not seasoned > enough to know what I am doing with it. Got the X server up > and still dinking... made a decision to try and download the I'd be glad to help you get it up and running. But it is really for advanced users. > FTP install for SuSE 8.2 because it is still not Redhat or > Mandrake (no offense please to those of you who like those > distros, just not had good luck with them myself)... Debian > would be a good idea too, is there a P4 optimised version of > it out there and it is easy to install? Is SuSE easy to > install? I want to avoid building my own kernel for the time > being because I frankly don't know what i am doing > obviously... thanks for any and all help. You really should learn, but you should learn with one that that someone else has built for you and has all your hardware working. Reason being it is much easier to learn one compile at a time which setting you need to change to add functionality for a single piece of hardware, than it is to try to figure out *all* the settings you might need to tweak to get your system up. Hence, a prebuilt kernel distro is the way to go. Debian is also a bit heavy on the techie side, but getting much better from what I hear. That said all of the major "user-friendly" distros have different drawbacks and strengths. I don't care for SuSE, but others do. It's generally an easy install, but *do* pay attention and *read* all the way through the install docs *before* installing and keep them handy while doing it. One wrong move and you could seriously fubar the install, in ways that are not immediately obvious. [Same goes for Mandrake, for different reasons] Also on your gentoo. Missing modules is a sign you have disabled or not enabled an important section in the kernel configuration. You really need to know what kind of hardware you have and modify the kernel compile parameters accordingly. I suspect you left out support for a whole range of devices. If you send me your kernel config file and all the devices I'll send you back a config that will load support for all your devices. X has a new option to autoconfigure itself. So getting X to work is relatively painless these days. XFree86 -configure should do it. Brian KC Linux Users Group -- to unsubscribe send mail to majordomo-3DadQFcgQnvYtjvyW6yDsg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Enter without the quotes in body of message "unsubscribe kclug" |
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