SomeGuyWithDSL
Group: Members
Posts: 27
Joined: June 2005 |
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Posted: June 17 2005,14:33 |
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Wow. I wasn't even intending on getting involved in this conversation (thought I was doing a plain HD install) until I read all of you so graciously trying to explain "frugal install."
Let me see if I've got this straight, as one option I have with frugal install:
1. I can install everything to my laptop's hard drive, no longer requiring the LiveCD for daily usage (like a hard disk install).
2. The kernel, modules, apps, etc. will be compressed and read-only so that every time I boot things will be "fresh" again in that regard (unlike a hard disk install). Disk access is cut way down because no changes are made to these, and updating Knoppix is easy because you just swap out the compressed file.
3. That would mean creating my own custom CD with the apps I want, and doing the frugal install from that disc, if they are different than those contained in the default DSL .iso.
4. The user storage areas where I keep my files are "normal," and persistent, just like it was an HD installation. They reside on the hard drive. They are unaffected by updating the Knoppix file, etc.
5. I only have 32 megs of RAM, so I can still run everything off the HD and a swap file. "toram" is not an option for me.
... Is that right? Sounds like the way to go unless I'm missing a big "something" somewhere.
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