Now that my main computer is working...
Sep. 29th, 2003 10:53 amLast night I reinstalled everything necessary for my dual-boot machine to work. I haven't installed all of my software yet, but the hardest parts have been completed.
If you ever decide to build your own dual-boot system, here is my advice:
I have some issues with Red Hat 9. I started with RH 7.1 back in July of 2001 and then moved to 7.3 about a year later. Each iteration has some good aspects, but each one also loses a couple useful features from the previous one. Nine has lost some important install features, such as:
I can hardly wait to install Slackware on another partition. I have work to do, after all. If Slackware had come with Grub, I wouldn't have bothered with the increasingly Byzantine Red Hat.
I like having this quiet keyboard. I also like having a job, so I'd better sign out.
-from my own chair again, Ps/d
If you ever decide to build your own dual-boot system, here is my advice:
- Start with a clean hard drive or a drive you don't mind will be wiped clean.
- Get Red Hat 9 (more on that later) and boot the computer from the first disc of the Red Hat CDs.
- Choose the text-based install and then hit alt-F2 to get the ash shell.
- Run fdisk from here.
- Create a primary partition for Windows, another primary for the boot loader (give it 200 MB if you have the space), and then a bunch of logical partitions for Linux flavors. Make your last partition a giant FAT32 partition for MP3s and shared files.
- Ctrl-Alt-Del to reboot. Red AHt's installer will shut down safely this way, believe it or not.
- Reboot into the graphical install, but only to make sure Disk Druid doesn't have any issues with the partitions you've made. If it's happy, everything else will be. Ctrl-Alt-Del.
- Install whichever version of Windows you're into (I'd recommend 2k).
- Install Red Hat 9, which will give you Grub (the best boot loader around). Be sure to carve some extra boot selections for future operating systems.
I have some issues with Red Hat 9. I started with RH 7.1 back in July of 2001 and then moved to 7.3 about a year later. Each iteration has some good aspects, but each one also loses a couple useful features from the previous one. Nine has lost some important install features, such as:
- Creating non-root accounts during install;
- being able to change workspaces be using alt-F# (could someone tell me what this bastard uses instead? I'm a keyboard man.)
- A Windowing Manager that has any real options (Metacity chuncks. I'm not five, I'd like choices. If I didn't want choices, I'd be running XP Home.)
I can hardly wait to install Slackware on another partition. I have work to do, after all. If Slackware had come with Grub, I wouldn't have bothered with the increasingly Byzantine Red Hat.
I like having this quiet keyboard. I also like having a job, so I'd better sign out.
-from my own chair again, Ps/d
no subject
Date: 2003-09-29 10:41 am (UTC)What, they haven't realized that LJ is a sales tool yet? Silly people. Tell them you've made a sale completely because of it. ;-)
no subject
Date: 2003-09-29 02:37 pm (UTC)By the way, I found an answer about the workspaces -- ctrl-alt-arrow. This is ridiculous. It means I have to know which workspace I'm in geometrically (because it's moving you from one space on a quadrant to another). Crazy! Unacceptable.
Where are the shell windows? Gah. I'm livid. I'm also going to tweak my partitions and get Slackware isntalled. I can't live with this Red Hat grief.
-replying to myself too