On 9/27/07, Aldo Foot <lunixer@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > Add to that that you can just get the rescue CD image, and use that > > to do a network install. You can put the DVD image on the hard > > drive, and install from that. Do you really want to get into the > > more exotic install methods? Remember, you can install Fedora on a > > machine that does not have an optical drive. (PXE boot, USB "pen > > drive" boot, etc.) > > > > Mikkel > > -- > > > > > > > > Agreed. > The only CD I ever use is the boot cd, I've never used an actual DVD to > install. > > ~Aldo. Works when you have the networking bandwidth, i.e. high download quota (10s of GB per month) and speed megabits vs. Hz. I haven't tried this recently. If I recall, each boot/rescue CD is specific to a given release. So if I boot an older release rescue CD (e.g. FC3), type "askmethod", select NFS, and point the URL to a F7 repository the install would fail. Does that problem still exist? Would be nice if there was a reusable network installer CD. It would keep old CDs from filling the landfills. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list