Hi Martin! I have no experience with nforce4 boards, so I can't give you much help here. However, I would suggest to add the module for your network card to the file /etc/modules. On booting, the network card wich is detectetd first becomes eth0, and the one detected second eth1 (this was easier when there was no ieee1394 (firewire) ethernet!). After modifying /etc/modules, restart your PC, and hopefully your standard network card will be on eth0.
Dual-booting different Debian (or other Linux/Unix installations) is no problem at all. I would suggest using the Grub bootmanager, but you also can do it with Lilo (both are offered by Debian, al least when you are looking for advanced configuration). You should carefully read the documentation of your bootmanager before installing it -- otherwise any other OS may become temporarily unavailable after installation of the bootmanager. Concerning partitioning, just be carefull not to overwrite existing partitions containing other OS. Apart from this warning, I believe the partition manager is fairly straightforward to use. You can add and delete partitions, choose the filesystem (just go with the default ext3; STAY AWAY FROM REISERFS), and decide on formatting and mounting point of the partitions. Metapackages are just collections of packages. The metapackage kde-core installs every package neccessary for a working KDE environment, including basic applications. Instead of installing every single package, you just type "apt-get install kde-core" or "aptitude install kde-core". As always, read the documentation of apt-get or aptitude - these tools are very powerful, but they also can do much harm! If you need a complete desktop environment, I would still go with i386 "stable" or "testing". These are fairly stable and offer a complete choice of software. In addition, many applications like Adobes AcrobatReader and the free OpenOffice, are only available as 32bit version. It is possible to use 32bit software with amd64 debian as well, but it is much more work to get it working. Regards Clemens Your mail from Tuesday 29 November 2005 01:06: > Hi, Clemens! > > Yep, my bad! I'm not used to burning CD images and, moreover, I did it from > a machine where no cd burning program was istalled, apart from the > Microsoft default. So I was simply copying the ".iso" file into the CD > (beginner's mistake! :D ). > > I finally managed to boot from a properly burnt CD, but it didn't go well, > because the DHCP detection failed. I introduced the information manually > (I've got ADSL through a router), but maybe I made some mistake, because > it wouldn't connect to the mirrors (it said "temporal error" after a while) > and I ended up with a text-only interface. Someone in this mailing list > told me of a trick to avoid manual configuration, but I don't think I quite > got it. I'll have to ask him. This is what he told me: ... > Anyway, I re-installed the AMD64 version, which more or less works. This > time I deleted the whole disk, but I would like to install two or more > versions of Debian with a dual boot (and maybe the Hurd? :) ). So, I > guess I have to select "edit partitions table manually" at the beginning of > the installation, right? Anything I should keep in mind? Do you know of > some particulary tricky feature about a Debian dual boot? > > On KDE, I still have to do some homework about what metapackages are and > how to install them. Meanwhile, could you please tell me the specific > commands to type? > > Thanks for your help, and Regards, > > Martin -- Clemens Bergmann Schwertlilienweg 14 68259 Mannheim [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

