On Thursday 13 August 2015 01:17:34 Roy J. Tellason, Sr. wrote:
On Wednesday 12 August 2015 05:56:09 pm Lisi Reisz
wrote:
On Wednesday 12 August 2015 19:16:22 Roy J.
Tellason, Sr. wrote:
I don't remember ever being offered that
option when I installed. Nor
a few other things that I was used to, like being able to configure my
network as opposed to the installation just using DHCP because it found
DHCP on the network. :-(
Where is this option available? Or was I supposed to install with some
specific invocation that I missed?
It is a question asked during the install.
As far as I can remember, having a root log-in is default, but you are
offered the chance to refuse. But I have only installed Jessie twice, so
may be misremebering it, because that is certainly what happens in
Wheezy. But I certainly had no problem installing with root.
It may be that it asked me if I wanted a root login to be created during
the install process, is that what you're talking about?
How, with what, and with what .iso, did you
install?
The DVD I used is in the drive at the moment, I was looking over some doc
files. It's the first one you can download for the 8.1 release.
I'd downloaded 7.0 a while back (hard to believe that it's been a couple of
years already!) and tried to install that one on my workbench computer,
which was not successful. That machine has Slackware, Ubuntu, and a
couple of others on it that I was taking a look at. Then I downloaded 8.0
more recently, and tried to install on this workstation on my desk, but I
ran into some issue or other, I can't recall just what offhand.
Thankfully I had also downloaded a "live" DVD and booting into that one and
using the install option there worked.
I managed to trash my first install pretty good, and had to re-install.
The second one also went fine, and I then proceeded to install a number of
software packages that I want to get to know and to use. One of the first
was mc, I'm just used to using it. :-) Also some CAD packages and
assorted other technical stuff. So I'm at the point where I'd really
rather not have to go through all that again.
I selected several desktop environments so I could evaluate them and see
what they were like, figuring that I'd add TDE to the mix. I just haven't
gotten around to that yet.
I'm used to booting into a textmode console on my machines, and doing
"startx" to get a GUI going. The default here seems to be to boot into the
GUI, and I don't recall being offered a choice about that, either. I
know how to go in and fiddle with inittab, but now I'm reading that this
setup uses something else entirely,
Welcome, or otherwise, to the world of systemd.
so I've gotta figure that one out too.
I'm also used to being able to log in as root, and use a GUI as that
user, and that hasn't worked out as well as I'd hoped either. At this
point I can select a number of different desktop environments with the GUI
login screen as a regular user, but logging into a text console as root
and then doing startx I am stuck with Xfce, which I find limiting.
I would expect you to be able to just uninstall the dm (gdm3? kdm?), boot
into the command line, log-in as whomsoever you wish, and startx. ISTR that
you can put the GUI you want to boot into from startx in an x conf file
(.xsession? probably not). I did this once, but it was ages ago and my
memory is fading.
The
darn games don't even seem to work!
I do have my network shares mounted, which is strange because I see a
failure indicated during the boot process, yet they're all there.
TDE is pretty high up on my list, as I'm used to KDE 3.x, which is what
I'm using now on this laptop, with Slackware 12.1 under the hood. Can you
tell I'm not usually in any big hurry to upgrade? :-)
If you are a KDE3-aholic you'll love TDE.
FWIW, all those seem minor and soluble to me.
Lisi