I apologize in advance for asking a tedious newbie-style question, but a couple 
hours reading FAQ lists, newsgroup archives and the last couple months of the 
archive of this mailing list still doesn't help me put it all together.

This week I've done test installations of RedHat 4.1, Slackware 3.1, FreeBSD 
and the "bo" distribution of Debian. I had CD's for RedHat and Slackware but 
attempted to do the Debian release by downloading the floppy images and then 
putting the "base", "libs", "net" and "x11" directories on a FAT partition on 
my hard disk drive.

At first I attributed the confusion surrounding my use of "dselect" to the fact 
that I didn't have a whole image of the CD on my disk partition. After doing 
some reading, though, it appears that everyone has this problem when they try 
their first Debian installation.

Is there a document some where that walks me through an example of installing a 
few packages at a time after a new installation? Once I get my hands on a 
Debian CD-ROM I'd like to do the basic installation and then add only a handful 
of things to my system. For instance, initially I'd put the following on my 
system: 1) enough of the compilers and libraries to build my own kernel, 2) 
XFree86 and a couple of window managers to try out, 3) just enough networking 
to dial my PPP ISP and do ftp, telnet and mail, 4) the Xemacs package, 5) LaTeX 
and maybe LyX. And being the conservative type that I am, I'd prefer to do 
these one at a time and in roughly that order. Of course, there a other nice 
applications I'll need to do my real work on the machine (xlisp-stat, g77, 
Maple, web browser, etc.) but I first want to get a basic system running and 
hammer on it enough to be convinced it is reliable and suited to my tasks at 
hand. 

Does each step in the process mean sorting through the package descriptions and 
figuring out what I need, then running several dependency-solving iterations 
through "dselect" until the messages stop? Or is there some grouping method 
that I missed (reading the "deity" discussion leads me to believe no such thing 
currently exists)? One reason I'm considering Debian rather than RedHat or 
Slackware is that I like to exercise control over what goes on my system. OTOH, 
I'm not infinitely patient in trying to get a usable system (that implies 
networking a X windows) up and running.

Oh, and one final query. Is the "Greenbush" source as good as any for getting 
Debian CD's? Seems like a good deal w.r.t. being up to date and reasonably 
priced.


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