in theory it should be possible. the easiest would be to "aptitude download"
all the packages into a directory and burn that, then somehow point to it or
copy all the archives to /var/cache/apt/archives. I think you can do this
much easier though, if you follow the instructions here:

https://code.goto10.org/projects/puredyne/wiki/liveUSBInstall

and just use the compressed filesystem.squashfs + persistence mode and boot
it with either grub or syslinux. beware though, the documentation on this is
far from complete! intuitively, what I would do is roughly the following:


   - download and burn the newest p:d (leek & potato rsync). you can find
   how here:https://code.goto10.org/projects/puredyne/wiki/GetPureDyne
   - boot it on your computer and use gparted to format the drive where it
   should be intstalled, probably making 3 partitions:
      - /dev/bla1 ext3 for p:d, making sure that the 'boot' flag is set
      - /dev/bla2 for swap
      - /dev/bla3 ext3 for persistence mode, making sure that you label the
      partition "live-rw"
   - follow the instructions here
   https://code.goto10.org/projects/puredyne/wiki/liveUSBInstall
      - make sure you use extlinux instead of syslinux here. this could mean
      that you need to change the names of the configfiles too!


maybe this will work easily, and that way you don't have to download all the
stuff etc. also, later on, upgrading the system will be much easier than
with a proper lenny install, as you just have to repeat the copy operations
int the howto.

hope that helps,

karsten


On Sun, Nov 2, 2008 at 8:05 PM, miquel parera <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:

> Hello!
>
> I want install PureDyne Miso in one computer without internet.
> I think that with two cd's, one for Debian Lenny and one for the repository
> of the meta-package puredyne it's possible.
>
> It's truth?  How? thanks.
>
> ---
> [email protected]
> irc.goto10.org #pure:dyne
>



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