debian installation

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thanks a million! this is what i was looking for...
i've got the hd, and cannot wait until Monday to pick up the barroed synth, 
and then the music shall start!
now tell me is it gonna make any difference when i install the debian as a 
dns server rather than a desctop system?
one more question: which drive will be the root?
oh, i'm looking forward to finishing the installation ...

many thanks once more!
ned
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Marcel Oats" <moats@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
Sent: Saturday, February 11, 2006 11:32 PM
Subject: Re: debian installation


> Hi, here's a Marcel rather woffley message, which is a bit long.
> At the risk of this question being answered already, if your new drive is
> unformatted, during the installation (before the system ejects the cd and
> reboots) you arrive at the (set up partitions) menu, or similar wording. 
> If
> you hit enter, you can select "automatic partitioning".  Do this, and you
> should get an option called
> "use the maximum free space".  In this instance, it will be the new drive,
> which of course has nothing on it yet.  You should be able to continue on
> your own, and you also will have the chance to read the screen during the
> "warning" question, as it will tell you which drive the new partition is
> being created on; in this instance, it'd be
> hdb.
>
> After installing the base system (the next step in the installation 
> process)
> you will be able to "install the grub boot manager".  This is the part of
> the system which allows you to choose between whether Linux or Windows
> boots.  When you hit enter, you'll get a question about installing it into
> the boot record of your first hard disk.  This is the one with Windows on
> it.  It's a good idea to do this, as it can be the first thing to load. 
> You
> should read the screen before hitting enter to accept Yes, and make sure
> that Windows XP is listed.  If for some reason it's not, tab to back, and
> try again.  There shouldn't be any trouble though, as it's a nice reliable
> boot manager.
> When the system reboots, you'll notice that there is a delay, then Linux
> loads.  During this delay, you can press down arrow (on my system it's 
> THREE
> times) to get to your XP, then press enter.  On here, various flavours of
> Linux are installed, such as Linux with recovery, without frame buffer 
> etc,
> but the nice thing is that they will all speak, as the speakup kernel is
> used.
>
> One thing you might like to do is to log onto Linux as root, and use an
> editor like vim or emacs to edit the file
> /boot/grub/menu.lst
> go down to the line that says something like
> "Title Windows XP Professional"
> or whatever, arrow to the start of the word "professional", press I to go
> into insert mode, then press control+v, followed by control+g.  If you 
> then
> look at the word, you'll find a ^ simble before it.
>
> Press
> <ESCAPE>:wq
> then return, and it should say it's written so many bytes.
> What we did, was actually suggested in the guide to installing Fedora with
> Speakup. This is to make the boot manager ring the bell, whenever you 
> arrow
> down to Windows XP.
> The default is Linux, so just press Enter, or wait, for the boot.
>
> I hope that's clear.
> Reply if it's nott, I'm about to scrap a system and put Debian onto that, 
> so
> can tell you exactly what happens.
> I've tried Fedora, and it's nice, but I am kind of experimenting I guess. 
> I
> want to try FC4, but don't know how to put a speakup kernel into a
> instalation cd.
> Marcel
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Ned" <ngranic at cox.net>
> To: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." 
> <speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
> Sent: Sunday, February 12, 2006 6:04 AM
> Subject: debian installation
>
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I installed debian with speakup in my classroom successfully after going
>> through the process once with my instructor. It went so smoothly to the
>> point of being incredible; I mean that was the first ever OS I have ever
>> installed on my own.
>>
>> Now, you guess, I want to do the same thing here at home on my own
>> machine, and that's where my questions start:
>> I have XP Pro on my 40-gig hd which is not partitioned, and I decided to
>> buy one more hd on which I want to install Linux. That 2nd hd would be a
>> slave, so how do I tell the debian to install itself onto that hd and to
>> boot up from it? Is this the best solution? I could get rid of everything
>> that is on the current hd and install Linux only, but in that case, will
>> linux support scanner on which I depend so much?
>>
>> I need to get this done asap!
>>
>> Bytheway, is there anybody willing to sell a hardware dec talk synth?
>>
>> Many thanks in advance!
>> Ned
>> _______________________________________________
>> Speakup mailing list
>> Speakup at braille.uwo.ca
>> http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
>>
>>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Speakup mailing list
> Speakup at braille.uwo.ca
> http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup 





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