John Hebert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Ditto what Jason says: don't run package-select or > dselect at the end of the install.
after installing applications make sure to review /usr/share/doc/<packagename>/README.Debian for specific changes Debian may have made to the original packages install. Debian has nice ways of managing kernels and customer kernel installs and other things like init scripts. Consider editing /etc/apt/sources.list and going to either testing or unstable. Consider installing aptitude -- a curses based frontend to apt -- for keeping up with the thousands of packages. apt-get install aptitude -- Scott Harney<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> "Asking the wrong questions is the leading cause of wrong answers" gpg key fingerprint=7125 0BD3 8EC4 08D7 321D CEE9 F024 7DA6 0BC7 94E5
