Debian desktop
Jeffry Smith
smith at missioncriticallinux.com
Thu Mar 29 09:14:06 EST 2001
Ron Peterson said:
> Anyone have any advice about how to /elegantly/ install an up-to-date
> desktop on Debian? I'm thinking stable/potato, but I could probably be
> convinced that woody is far enough along to consider also.
If you want the Ximian stuff, install potato, then
add:
deb http://spidermonkey.ximian.com/distributions/debian unstable main
to /etc/apt/sources.list. After that, run:
apt-get update (to update the packages list in your system)
apt-get install tasksel
tasksel (brings up an ncurses gui)
Choose the task-helix-gnome, and click finish.
It will automatically install the Ximian Gnome desktop.
(Note: there's probably a KDE equivalent, but I'm a GNOME person, so
that's what I know).
I'd also recommend running an:
apt-get update
then:
apt-get dist-upgrade
or
apt-get dselect-upgrade
to get the latest potato packages out of security.debian.org (assuming
you're installing from CD-ROM).
>
> I don't yet have a lot of experience with Debian. I'm trying to convert
> from Red Hat. I'm contemplating installing Debian on a pool of
> workstations used by the Math Department at Mt. Holyoke College. I know
> I could configure a nice setup for them using Red Hat. I like Debian's
> package management tools better, though. The problem is, the
> stable/potato desktop packages are rather out-of-date. In fact, I'm not
> sure the stable xfree86 will even work with the new hardware we'll be
> using. There are newer .deb's available, but if I start getting too
> tricky with the package management, I'm obviating the advantages that
> sold me on this solution in the first place.
Potato should work on most new HW, but you may not get the great new
features of the latest/greatest soundcard/video card. However, Potato is
upgraded on a routine basis to add in new modules that are compatible with
the base install (I believe it's up to R2 now).
The other option is to run Woody/testing. I'm doing that, both at work
and at home, and 99% of the time it's stable. However, it IS testing.
Stable is rock-solid, testing is leading edge, unstable is bleeding edge.
>
> Any advice?
see above.
jeff
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Jeffry Smith Technical Sales Consultant Mission Critical Linux
smith at missioncriticallinux.com phone:603.930.9739 fax:978.446.9470
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Thought for today: creep v.
To advance, grow, or multiply inexorably. In
hackish usage this verb has overtones of menace and silliness,
evoking the creeping horrors of low-budget monster movies.
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