Just some comments on my first experiences trying to install 8.0... 1st try - Dell Dimension xps200pro ppro200/128M/4G - booting from CD1 gave me an error, told me to try booting from CD2 - CD2 booted, began the install, searched for braille display, went to black screen with 'wristwatch' icon, and hung there for >45 minutes, at which time I powered down. 2nd try - AMD K62-500/256M/20G - CD1 booted successfully. The 'wristwatch' screen which hung me on the other system only lasted a minute or so, during which there was much CD and disk activity to reassure me that something ws happening. - I first selected the 'update system' option, so that it would mount and read my current config. Then I immediately hit the 'back' button, and selected 'new installation'. - I created new partitions on the disk for / and /home. - I went into 'detailed package selection' and was delighted to see that it indeed had already discovered everything I had installed in my old 7.2 system! - I browsed the list anyway, selecting a few new toys for me to play with this time around... - I immediately got a message that 'RPM returned an error' with no explanation. When I clicked OK, the installation proceeded. - During the installation phase, the time estimates quickly became overly optimistic. The progress meter on CD1 quickly went to 100%, then it continued to install about 40 more packages while I stood there waiting for the CD2 prompt to appear.... - Reboot. Asked me to remove the media. After rebooting, yast never fully painted the window, or gave any prompt, until I put CD1 back in the drive, at which time it finally asked me for CD2. - Loading of the rpms from CD2-5 was uneventful. Initial configuration: Printer: In addition to the default 300dpi, 600dpi, and greyscale queues, I set up a 'raw' queue, and discovered that yast won't conveniently set up a text-only queue. Oh, well, I've done that manually before, I can do it again. I like a simple anti-stairstep filter, without wasting resources sending text thru a2ps and ghostscript. Modem: My ISP isn't in the list, so I found nothing I could configure. It did find my modem, but it didn't give me the option to create /dev/modem and leave it at that. What's it going to do with my ISP, anyway? set up wvdial, kinternet, kppp? Which? All? Video: I declared my monitor, and tried several denser resolution settings, finally deciding on 1280x960x24bpp. - Proceed. It saves my configs, starts X, and up comes a KDM panel. Where's the cursor??? I log in as root, and KDE3 starts up. I even hear the opening sounds, but still no cursor! Red background is ugly to me, and I can't figure out why the choice of christmas-tree ornaments. Then the gestalt shifts, and I see exploding bombs. Good choice to remind me that I'm logged in as root! I trust as an ordinary user I'll get something more benign... I manage to navigate a bit from the keyboard, but I'm fumbling. I play with my mouse, and discover it's working, since as I slowly move it about the desktop, I see actions indicative of the mouse hovering over buttons, icons, etc. I like the 'swelling' icons on the panel much better than OSX's too-gaudy magnification/warping effect. The mouse buttons seem to work as well. At this point, I get frustrated enough to turn to the laptop to write this report. I don't feel like continuing to feel about in the dark, trying to continue my configuration. I vaguely remember somebody reporting a similar 'hidden cursor' effect back with 7.2 or 7.3, so I'll go searching the archives.... Anybody have the fix for this closer to the top of the stack? Rick Green
participants (1)
-
Rick Green