For systems with a seperate home partition, it would be good if one of
the options presented initially would be something like "Re-
install/upgrade system, keeping existing home folder/user data", which
if chosen, should then automatically use the same partition
mounting/mappings as the previous installation did.  Some care/warnings
would have to be presented depending on whether the user has a seperate
home partition (and if not advised that they will LOSE all data if they
proceed with a single partition reinstalltion, together with the advice
that an "upgrade" may be performed from the operating system itself, not
the LiveCD.)  Additionally, the "manual partitioner" should ideally
always default to picking the correct mount points for a pre-existing
system, and not mount the old root, boot, home etc under "media."

The reason I'm suggesting these changes is that I've been reinstalling
fairly regularly lately testing various things, and so have a seperate
home partition to prevent it from being blown away on reinstall.  The
only annoying thing here was that due to the "manual" installer choosing
mount points under /media by default, I have to manually go and edit
them to point to the right places again every time.

-- 
Installer should warn if previous installation of Ubuntu exists
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/133343
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