Hi there -

I recently bought a set of Debian CDs (official press, non-US version) and 
attempted to get Debian up and running on my old laptop, 
a Dell Latitude LT.

I was wary of the install, as the CD drive connects through the PCMCIA slot, 
which seems to be a notoriously difficult method of 
installation.  However, the CD drive appears to be bootable, and (seeing as I'm 
not too concerned about the laptop) I decided to 
try anyway.  The CD drive booted into the Debian install system just as the 
manual said it would so I had high hopes.  Especially as 
the floppy drive for this thing is knackered, so I was glad to read a full CD 
install wouldn't require a floppy.

However, after partitioning the HD and initialising the root and swap 
partitions the time came to start transferring stuff across 
from the CDs.  I was presented with a choice of installation media, both floppy 
drives, or some network options.  'Install from CD' 
didn't appear on the list.  The manual stated that a full CD install would 
auto-detect the CDs and skip this stage anyway.

Somewhat confused I tried skipping a few stages and getting PCMCIA support up 
and running to try and solve the problem, but as soon 
as I've answered all the questions it throws up (by accepting all defaults) it 
gives an error message ("encountered a problem 
initialising PCMCIA" I think) and drops back to the main menu.

Now that the new partition table is written to disk the laptop will no longer 
boot to windows, so I'm committed.  I don't mind but 
I'm wondering if there is any way to get Debian to recognise the CD drive.  I'm 
slightly puzzled as the CD drive is bootable, so 
why can't Debian find it?

Can anyone out there help?

Many, many thanks,

Henry.

-- 

Henry Todd

Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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