On Sun, Dec 16, 2018 at 07:08:10AM -0500, Hendrik Boom wrote:
[cut]
> > > g4sra via Dng <dng@???> wrote:
> > >
> > > > Media partitioning, formatting
> > > > Configure mountpoints
> > > > Install Bootloader
> > > > Install Kernel, Modules & Firmware
> > > > Install Shell & package management software
> > > > Configure console
> > > > Configure network
> > > > Boot
> > > >
> > > > Discuss...
[cut]
>
> I'm not sure how minimal your preinstall would be, but what I've found
> difficult in the old days was finding the right device drivers,
> figuring out which packages to install to get them, enough network
> configuration to be able to download them, and, in the *really* old
> days, guessing the monitor geometry I need to get X to work.
>
> It was annoying to have to have to figure these thing out after install
> time whem the installer had already found answers that worked for it.
>
:D
You see: in just two emails we have come from a *minimal* base
installation (a shell with a kernel, a bootloader, and a working
dpkg/apt) to a fully-functioning network server (an ssh server with
configurable keys!) and a working X config. Another three emails and
we get requests for automatic partitioning, automagic disk encryption,
remote shell during install, choice between different mirror
configurations, localisation, choice of meta-packages for typical
use-cases and.....
...and we end up with something of the same complexity of the current
debian-installer.
We keep saying we crave for minimalism. But the same concept of
*minimalism* has become quite bloated in the last 20 years :)
HND
KatolaZ
--
[ ~.,_ Enzo Nicosia aka KatolaZ - Devuan -- Freaknet Medialab ]
[ "+. katolaz [at] freaknet.org --- katolaz [at] yahoo.it ]
[ @) http://kalos.mine.nu --- Devuan GNU + Linux User ]
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