Nope but it has a very good installation procedure on the website. Just print 
it out and follow it step by step.

It really makes you learn how your system is set up....so it's a good learning 
experience at the very least. On top of that you get a clean and optimized
system.

I highly recommend it...but only if you fast connection to the net and are 
prepared to wait a day or two initially while it compiles all your programs 
for you.

Later
Simon

On Sun, 13 Oct 2002 08:29, Justin Soong wrote:
> I'm very interested in Gentoo. But is the installation not in GUI?
>
> Justin
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Christopher Sawtell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Saturday, October 12, 2002 10:59 PM
> Subject: Review of Gentoo ( fairly long )
>
> > Maybe Chris could still do the Gentoo anyway as well - probably a bit of
> > interest in that (I know I am intrigued).
>
> Unfortunately I can't be at the meeting on Thurday, so here's my take on
> Gentoo ( The Smallest Penguin btw )
>
> I have only had Gentoo on my newly aquired machine, which is a 400MHz PII,
> more of less since I got it about  3 or 4 months ago. The reason I use it
> is because I desperately wanted to get out of the rpm dependencies jail
> into which the rpm distribs want to put you as soon as you want to change
> something. As an inveterate fiddler I find the fact that you cannot update
> your rpm files safely unless they are created by the distributor, and
> frequently not even then -- distributors who btw are just as able to err as
> the rest of us -- just so restrictive as to be irksome. For example I could
> not get Mandrake to upgrade successfully from 8.0 via 8.1 to 8.2 without a
> total re-install of the O/S. The source distribs, of which Gentoo is but
> one,
> just remove that restriction.
>
> That's the main reason, the others are that the Gentoo team don't add their
> own 'features' to the apps, you get what the progams' authors intend you to
> have. Upgrading an app is as simple as saying:
>
> emerge rsync
> emerge app
> emerge clean
>
> and Gentoo takes care of everything. Even upgrading the glibc because of
> the recent overfow bug is done in exactly that way.
>
> The Gentoo distrib. is well documented at the right level for me.
> The Gentoo Team take a _great_ deal of care to get it right, you only get
> loaded onto you computer what you ask for. You are in control of what goes
> onto you machine.
>
> Need I say more? Only to say that while the initial setup process is
> improving
> all the time, it's really not aimed at the newbie. ( Unless you can compile
> a
> Kernel successfully, don't even nightmare about installing Gentoo all by
> yourself! ), but once the system has been installed initially, any newbie /
> fool / halfwit can use it and keep it up to date. The whole point of Gentoo
> is simply that you can set the machine's exact architecture into a config
> file and the binaries you generate will be optimised especially for your
> machine. No stupid nonsense such as running old style i386 binaries on your
> latest and greatest machine when it's got the very latest, and under those
> circumstances, totally wasted, extended instruction set.
>
> For the whole story I'd suggest looking at the web site, paying particular
> attention to the links down the LHS of the page.
>
> http://www.gentoo.org/
>
> ps Is this kind of thing ok going to the list?
> Or would you prefer it to be on a web site, with just a pointer url in the
> e-mail?

-- 
Simon Hansman
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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