Newsgroups: comp.os.linux From: explorer@iastate.edu (Michael Graff) Subject: Installation and Updates Organization: Iowa State University, Ames IA Date: Sat, 23 May 1992 19:34:14 GMT One thing 386BSD has over Linux is ease of installation. It took me a little over thirty minutes to install 386BSD on my machine. So far it has taken two hours of simply collecting stuff so I can make a working system. I like Linux, and would like it even more if one of those people who apparently USE it would simply tar up their /usr /etc and other directories and put them someplace where I can get them. I know Unix, I like Unix, but I'd like to be at least a bit organized anyway! ;) P.S. I still prefer a BSD-type system. I don't like short filenames, and I'd love to NFS my roomates computer with mine. Anyone have any real networking stuff out there for Linux? -- HI!-I'M-A-.SIGNATURE-CONDOM.--COPY-ME-TO-PROTECT-YOUR-.SIGNATURE-FROM-INFECTIO I Michael Graff N ! explorer@iastate.edu ! -I'M-A-.SIGNATURE-CONDOM.--COPY-ME-TO-PROTECT-YOUR-.SIGNATURE-FROM-INFECTION!!
Newsgroups: comp.os.linux From: tytso@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Theodore Ts'o) Subject: Re: Installation and Updates Reply-To: tytso@athena.mit.edu Organization: The Internet Date: Sun, 24 May 1992 11:23:23 GMT From: explorer@iastate.edu (Michael Graff) Date: 23 May 92 19:34:14 GMT One thing 386BSD has over Linux is ease of installation. It took me a little over thirty minutes to install 386BSD on my machine. So far it has taken two hours of simply collecting stuff so I can make a working system. I like Linux, and would like it even more if one of those people who apparently USE it would simply tar up their /usr /etc and other directories and put them someplace where I can get them. For right now, the easiest way to get set up with Linux is to use the MCC interim release, which comes on four diskettes, and gives you your basic system: The kernel, basic unix utilities, shoelace, GCC, etc. You boot the first disk, and it automatically comes up, instructs you to use fdisk, mkfs, and then does an mostly-automatic install of Linux onto your hard disk. Alan Clegg is also working on a easy-to-install release of Linux, but that's not out yet. It takes a lot more work than you might at first realize to set up something like this! - Ted