On 3 July 2013, at 17:28, Zind wrote:
> ...
> Use an external network adapter, uh... I never thought of that.
> AFAIK, many USB netwok adapters won't work correctly with Linux.

My experience has been the opposite, that even the cheapest USB network 
adaptors have worked.

Maybe I've just been lucky and this is not the norm, but from what I've seen 
"USB network adapters don't work with Linux" is the sort of thing that might 
have been true 10 years ago.

> Previously, I bought a Mercury MW300U USB network adapter, unfortunately,
> it doesn't work properly with Ubuntu 12.04. Then, that USB network adapter
> was left in the corner of my room. :-(

Again, based on my experience, I might be wrong, the only thing I can guess is 
that this USB NIC featured a very recent chipset at the time Ubuntu 12.04 was 
packaged or released.

>> 2. For each emerge command in the installation guide, run `emerge -fp
>> package-name` first, and redirect the output into a textfile. 
> 
> IIRC, the LiveUSB is a read-only file system. So, I'm afraid that I could
> not redirect the required package information to a text file.

Well, the LiveUSB is a read-only file system, but you're installing Gentoo onto 
some kind of writable filesystem - an SSD or hard-disk. 

When I say "for each emerge command in the installation guide", these are the 
commands which compile packages and save the files on the hard-disk. So as a 
temporary measure you could save the textfile in the root directory of the new 
install; the computer probably supports USB flash-drives, which you can write 
to from the LiveCD - use another tmux window or virtual terminal if necessary.

Gentoo installation is really flexible - the whole process is basically about 
writing a bunch of files to the hard-drive. With an appreciation of that, it 
doesn't matter how you get those files on the hard-disk - you can use any 
alternate way you can think of.

Stroller. 


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