I finally decided to ditch Kubuntu due to multile problems. I tried
Mandriva and was completely floored by the install progress. It offered
me the option of using ndiswrapper for my wifi card right during the
install and the card came up automatically after the install. Clean
interface. But I don't want to start a new learning curve right now. But
it's definitely going into a vmware vm soon.
So back to good old debian. First I got the netinst cd and then tried
the debain-kde cd. So far so good. It asked for the isl3886 firmware
from a new medium but that was that. The wifi card did not work after
the install. Not debian's fault because I haven't been able to get the
card working with anythng but ndiswrapper.
Even though this was a 'full' cd, the install insisted on downloading a
hell of a lot of files (more than 50 or so). Then after the full install
was over and I had rebooted and ran apt-update and apt-get upgrade, it
wanted to delete almost 40 files using apt-get auto-remove.
If I try to install without using a net mirror, the sources.list is bare
except for the cdrom line.
Now I want to install debian on another machine at a different location.
Seeing as how I've already dowloaded all these files on one machine, how
can I use this to avoid downloading them again for the second install.
What are the options available ? What I was thinking is install without
a net mirror, and then copy over the sources.list and the contents of
/var/cache/apt/archives to the new machine and then run apt-get update
and upgrade.
The second machine is at my clinic and I cannot afford to mess with it
too much. It's still running kubuntu 8.04 and is not much trouble but
I'd rather run one distro on both my main machines.
thank you,
Sharukh.
--
Dr. Sharukh K R Pavri. Homoeopath, Linuxer.
My family history begins with me, but yours ends with you. --
Iphicrates.