mikshaw
Group: Members
Posts: 4856
Joined: July 2004 |
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Posted: May 02 2006,12:20 |
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I agree with you there. Personally I don't see any solid argument for doing a traditional harddrive install of DSL when it means losing much of what makes DSL unique and flexible. For a person with a very old machine, one that doesn't have enough ram to run anything beyond the base system (or perhaps not even that), there are more appropriate distributions available which install in the traditional way and fully support this method. However, I've always said that one of the greatest strengths of Linux, and open source in general, is the freedom to choose how you want to run your system. Since the harddrive install script is only a little over 6k, it doesn't really hinder the main path of DSL development as a compressed and modular system. The only real downside is, as you said, having to support those people who break what would otherwise have been a fairly unbreakable system =o)
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