Progeny Announces Graphical Installer for Debian Woody
jdaily writes "In light of recent negative reviews of Debian in which the installer was roundly criticized, this announcement may have particular timeliness and relevance: Progeny has made available an i386 Debian 3.0 (woody) installer
image based on PGI, the Progeny Graphical Installer. This is
available at Progeny's free software archive." I've installed Debian so many times that I've just learned to cope with the installer, but this is a much needed boost.
It drives me crazy that with the incredible talent behind Debian the install process is such a pain. Installing Suse, Mandrake and RH are not harder to install than installing Windows XP or OS X. Installing freeBSD is confusing until you find a few hours after you think you mastered sysinstall a kind soul at a bsd chatroom tells you to use the ports instead.
Installing Debian (or Gentoo) is just too damn confusing. I admire what Debian and Gentoo are aiming for, but they need to come up with a no-hassle installer.
Pedro
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The Insomniac Coder
I, for one, will stick with the ncurses generic Debian install, for it is what I use and like, but I will also welcome the graphical installer, for it will be quite helpful to other people and bring more people over to use Debian who were initially scared away by the hardcore install.
In other words, I don't see this as a matter of improving the install, but simply making it more readily available to those for whom the install was previously too complicated for. This is a good thing.
[I apologize for any incoherence in the previous statements, I'm running on no sleep... again.]
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"Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
I fail to see why this is any better than the standard text installation. Worse, it requires a graphical display, so you then enter the fb/X11 compatability issues. Whats wrong with a text installer? You're only going to be looking at it for say, an hour at the very most, right?
Does the graphical frontend actually offer any significant additions over the text one?
The problem with the Progeny installer is that it is not available for all platforms Debian supports, and it was decided it would be easier to write one from scratch.
Why it couldn't be used for the platform 90%+ of Debian users use (i386) I don't know.
Is there any way to just simply mix and match different disks? I'm wondering if you could install the PGI-enabled first CD, then when tasksel or whatever prompts you for additional CDs, use the other 6 in the set. I get the impression you can't, as the Progeny site talks about creating your own installer CDs (plural, not singular).
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Death will come, and will have your eyes
-- Pavese
I haven't had any problems with the Debian installer , but I can understand it can be daunting to a newbie. Allthough I've seen Debian installations done by people not too acquainted with Linux (but they did have experience with other OSes (sp?)).
Anyway, I'm confident the Debian developers will come up with a decent installer by the time Sarge is promoted to stable.
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I haven't seen debian's installer since 1998, when I installed this box.
I'm sure it hasn't changed, and I HOPE it hasn't changed, because OF that installer, I can get a debian box set up and going in less than 20 minutes.
I believe one of debians strengths [installer] has been to, perhaps, "weed out", those who are incapable of reading HOWTO's and README's PRIOR to installation.
Hardcore Linux guru's are respected because they can pull off anything in Linux. Well I say this: it's about time the Hardcore Debian hackers show the world what they can do and create an installer that can put distros like RedHat & Madrake to shame.
Just my two cents,
Yuioup
The Debian installer is no big deal once you go through it once. It's no different than any other installer used to be. And if you can't get it to work with Mandrake or some other foo-foo installer, you still have to address the same types of questions. HOW MANY TIMES DO YOU INSTALL -- ONCE!
Where Debian does fall down is with their hardware detection. I've been using Debian for several years now after learning with Slackware. The hardware detection process throughout the entire installation is just shitty. It's not just the installation process, but everything after that. Adding hardware or software that uses hardware (sound support, openGL) specifically is a nightmare beyond anything I've ever experience anywhere else. In just about every case I have had to resort to doing all of the hardware configuration by hand. Exceptions to this are CD-burners and my only USB device.
But even those required a lot of back-end work to get the user-rights sorted out. I didn't even know that joe-user was not part of the audio group or that USB devices are mounted as root-only.
I think Debian is awesome and will probably not leave it unless gentoo can get their shit together. But hardware is a nightmare. I think this is true on just about any system though.
That said, yes, debian's installer is pretty good, better than pgi I'd say, but there are always things that could be improved.
If you're going to be elitist, it would help to be elite.
Great idea! Let's abandon all Linux business software because Linux has a ridiculously low amount of installed base of business users.
Random is the New Order.