
It's downloading now, but very slowwww.....
HAPPY EASTER!
Screenshots pleaselipk wrote:look&feel:
this edition is extremely ugly. The background is purple the icons are orange and the window borders are black (and the buttons somewhy had been put on the left).
It sounds like you only tried the graphical installer. Download the "alternate" desktop CD and try the ncurses-based installation. You can set the debconf level to make the install as fine grained and customized as you want, to the point that it can end up very much like a Slackware install.lipk wrote:I installed it on a spare partition.
Summary:
installer:
still no "don't install grub" option
Canonical still isn't interested in what do you want to install on the computer
You're right, I've never tried alternate install... on the download page it was described as "an installer for those who has to install first and just then can get X to work" and the very few screenshots I saw didn't show anything else than the GUI installer options in blue and black. But next time I'll try itIt sounds like you only tried the graphical installer. Download the "alternate" desktop CD and try the ncurses-based installation. You can set the debconf level to make the install as fine grained and customized as you want, to the point that it can end up very much like a Slackware install.
.My experience with 9.04 and 9.10 was very different that yours. With the Intel chipset in my netbooks 9.04 was an unholy, buggy, virtually unusable mess. Fixes almost made it tolerable. For me 9.10 was flawless in every respect except for my usual complaints with network manager. Once I ripped out nm and installed wicd I was happy with what I had
Of course, it isn't a problem if an OS feeds a few hundred mbs to fancy features. But I saw only the same apps&services as in the previous releases, consuming much more memory.Regarding memory consumption and bloat, you really have to remember that Ubuntu has a very different target audience than SalixOS or Slackware. Ubuntu is designed with the non-technical user and the Windows/Mac new convert in mind. Ease of use for a newcomer trumps everything else. Having the ability to buy mp3s from your media player like you can on a Mac is a big deal for Lucid Lynx. Somehow I don't ever see that as important to Slackware