Debian Gets Win32 Installer
An anonymous reader writes "Debian hacker Robert Millan has just announced the availability of a Debian-Installer Loader for win32. The program, inspired by Ubuntu's similar project, features 64-bit CPU auto-detection, download of linux/initrd netboot images, and chainloading into Debian-Installer via grub4dos. The frontend site goodbye-microsoft.com/ has been set up for advocacy purposes. Here are some screenshots."
The ease with which someone could blow away their Windows install (and apposite data) is hilarious, actually; the frontpage is slick, and the Debian logo has a nice, clean svg -> png feel.
The one thing I always felt FOSS had going for it were pious, minimalist interfaces;* goodbye-microsoft.com is no exception.
_____________
* And dangerous ones, like fdisk.
yes, it DOES run linux
Has that site been slashdotted? And if so, is there a mirror?
If creativity is the field, copyright is the fence.
goodbye-webserver.com
What would be funny, is if somebody managed to automate this, and used an IE exploit to force it to run.
Disclaimer: I cannot be held responsible if somebody actually does this.
As of 10/06/03, I hate COBOL developers.
It is, at least, quite different from a CD install in that your Windows install (presuming this works the same as the Ubuntu version) remains untouched (aside from getting a new directory and a couple of extra files) with no risk of data loss via repartioning etc. Certainly an interesting idea.
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From the announcement:
...
This has a few interesting applications:
- Migrating to Debian for users who have no idea how to burn an ISO and/or how to configure their BIOS for CD boot.
Uhhhh, if someone doesn't know how to burn an ISO or tinker with their BIOS, is this installer really something they should be screwing around with?
I just tried it, it said everything went fine, I chose the Debian Installer at reboot, and I got a grub menu with 3 choices, expert, standard and auto. All three resulted in a "file not found message", so I booted back to XP.
I'm not sure that'd be so funny... people would actually blame linux for it, you know. The PR for debian would probably tank. Even, as I mentioned elsewhere, if a windows fanboy might do this with that very agenda in mind, I strongly suspect the outcome would be the same, regardless of who did it.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
You have sent it in havn't you?
Uhhhh, if someone doesn't know how to burn an ISO or tinker with their BIOS, is this installer really something they should be screwing around with?
I understand that it's dangerous to "screw around" with your computer when it's running Windows, but I did not know that writing a file was one of those dangerous things now.
You would be amazed at how difficult some vendors make it to do what should be very easy. Though burning an ISO image should be the easiest thing a program could do with a blank CD, most burning programs either lack the option or hide it. Telling your computer what device to boot off should also be easy, but the larger vendors don't display the keystroke required to get into the BIOS configuration utility. What should take five minutes can easily take hours and could take a trip to the store to buy burning software. People are usually put off but these types of guessing game, especially when the results are uncertain.
All of it backfires eventually. A user who's insulted enough will do something about it. Sooner or later, they all learn.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
... oh, wait....
Engineering is the art of compromise.
For the release of Vista in two days, which will make this installer break! Vista no longer uses boot.ini or the NTLDR loader.
In fact, I'm using the Vista RC2 bootloader to boot Windows XP. The Debian installer would fail horribly because the boot process would not be altered atall.
If the installers are able to create a functional dual boot system without affecting Windows then this could be really good for Linux adoption, assuming my situation is even semi-common outside my group of friends.
I've worked with live-CD's in the past and would like to install Linux, but the problem has always been the threat of lost data and system downtime getting the OS to work. Between school and my job I can't afford to be without a functional computer for any real length of time, so even the small chance of something going wrong and the natural learning curve of a new OS have made switching impossible. If this option is able to do what Ubuntu plans then switching would be a very easy decision.
A few hours and an over-night download giving a fully functional Windows OS for work and school and a Linux OS for learning the system would be just what I've wanted.
Does it go on forever?
d-i does allow optional resizing of the windows partition and setting up a dual-boot system. It does not scan windows for settings or the like.
Oh BTW, while it's slashdotted, you can see it at http://www.mirrordot.org/stories/f592f4a8f9a66105d 885ff7a49228380/index.html
see shy jo
1. No
2. No
You only avoided the need for burning a CD, but not the d-i. That's why the Ubuntu one is much easier to use.
For the curious...
.iso image under WinXP without having to go out and purchase a full version of Nero or Roxio. This is a very handy tool.
m
Here is a link to the ISO Burner Power Toy for Windows XP. This will allow you to record a CD or DVD
http://isorecorder.alexfeinman.com/isorecorder.ht
Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
You will be surprised just how noob some users are.
/usr/local/lib, respectively). Especially Mac users have trouble because they have to do this as root user, which often is a concept unknown to them.
I have written a cross-platform application that consists of just an executable and a shared library (DLL/.so, respectively).
Even with the email-assistance I give them, regularly it proves too difficult for users to copy the library file to the default library directory (c:\windows\system32 or
This happens so often that I'm working on an installer now. End users just can't be bothered with technicalities and procedures.
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You had to launch BeOS as an application within Windows, while this method still makes you fire up Debian in the bootloader before entering Windows, apparently.
Microsoft do provide a program to burn ISO images - it's in the Windows Server 2003 Resource Kit and it's called 'cdburn.exe'.
WHY they can't simply distribute a mission critical tool like this along with the OS I have no idea.
I am loving this 'click here to install Linux' trend - I am wondering how long it is going to be before we see a worm exploiting this to install Linux on vulnerable machines.
All it would take is a silent installer with a built in bit torrent client to download the files and an XP theme for Gnome or KDE.
They could even advertise - don't like Windows? Want Linux? No problem - just plug your Windows machine into the net, turn off your firewall and go out for a few hours.
I always feel that different operating systems should be on different parttions so as to gve better redundancy and the ability to remove one without wiping the others. It was a bad idea when MS allowed Windows 2000 and 98 to coexist on a single FAT32 partition and this is a bad idea now..
If the Debian people want to make migration easier, they should built a Win32 app that exports outlook express email to mbx and installs it into Thunderbird, copies over address books, favourites and wallpaper. THATs the sort of thing that gets a newbie linux user feeling happy.
I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
I think it's better to promote Linux because of what it does well, rather than promoting Linux by saying MS is no good.
Penny - plain text accounting
That's the problem with Windows. Until they get that stuff sorted, it will never be ready for the desktop.
The windows based installer is an interesting idea, and the Ubuntu version looks pretty good.
However, the goodbye-microsoft.com front end site is a complete disaster.
It just contains a link to an executable file. The 'More details about it link' says NOTHING about what it does. It doesn't say what it will install, what it is for, or what it will do to your existing OS.
I really hope that few people would be stupid enough to run the executable. Getting people to run random files from sites with names that suggest that they will trash your OS is not something to be encouraged.
(By the way, you do know about shift-command-G in the Finder, don't you? I take it this is how you are directing the user to open
- Migrating to Debian for users who have no idea how to burn an ISO
and/or how to configure their BIOS for CD boot.
really the people we want to invite to the party?
"In a hierarchy every employee will rise to his level of incompetence". The Peter Principle
some DVD/CD burner program (believe it or not, WindowsXP does *not* do this out of the box!)
I forget the current Slashdot stance: do we want Windows to do everything out of the box, or do we want to chastise them for doing anything out of the box because that drives away competition? I mean, if they're going to be chastised for including a web browser (an absolute essential for everyone these days), but then complain that they don't include burning software (still only needed by a subset of everyone) isn't that a little hypocritical? If they did include burning software, wouldn't that drive Roxio and Nero out of business like IE did Netscape?
Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
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The problem is not merely including software extras with windows, it's the way they're made mandatory and favoured over 3rd party alternatives. the EU got a different build of Windows when requested MS to remove Media Player, that shouldn't have to happen. On a Mac, if you drag Safari to the trash bin it will not drag the Help system with it...
That's SO user friendly! A 30 page document! Much better than a one-click installer!!!
Reporting bugs on Slashdot is helpful?
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