5.10 preview install disaster

Alex Marten alex.marten at gmail.com
Wed Sep 14 02:53:30 UTC 2005


I guess with that many installs you never had time to realize the
importance of reading documentation.  Ubuntu makes use of sudo instead
of a root account, and I believe all those times you say it asked you
for the "root password" it actually asks you for "your password". 
Next time I suggest reading what it actually says on the screen. ;)

On 9/13/05, Grant Edwards <grante at visi.com> wrote:
> I just downloaded and installed the 5.10 preview and I'm pretty
> dissappointed.  After all the rave reviews I've read about
> Ubunto, I'd have to say it's the worst Linux install I've ever
> done.
> 
> I've done at least 50 Debian installs, dozens of Mandrake
> installs and installs of every RedHat version since 2.1.  I've
> also installed several different versions of Suse, TurboLinux,
> and a few others. This particular laptop has had three or four
> different Debian installs, at least four RedHat installs and
> five or six Mandrake installs.  All those installs worked fine
> except for a few where suspend didn't work.
> 
> Them along comes the "breezy badger".  The install process
> itself seemed to go smoothly except for the network device
> section.  It didn't detect my cardbus network card, and when it
> told me to go back and install a module for it, there was no
> way to do so -- it just did the autodetect and told me no
> network card was detected and I should go back and install a
> module for it.
> 
> Once the install finished, I logged in and booted up Gnome.
> None of the administration/config utilities work.  They ask for
> the root password, "start" for a few seconds, then nothing.
> [Except for one of the network configuration tools -- it brings
> up a blank window and then locks up so that you have to kill
> it.]
> 
> After editing /etc/network/interfaces and manually bringing up
> the network, I tried to install the jed editor using apt-get.
> Nope.  No sources are configured, so apt-get is useless.
> 
> I pick the "add/remove programs" entry off the menu. It asks
> for the root password, then nothing.
> 
> I try to "log out" and that doesn't work either.
> 
> So, it's ctrl-alt-backspace to kill X.  I do a "shutdown -fr"
> from a console and it hangs "checking the battery status" while
> booting up.
> 
> Not impressed so far...
> 
> --
> Grant Edwards                   grante             Yow!  I am having a
>                                   at               CONCEPTION--
>                                visi.com
> 
> 
> --
> ubuntu-users mailing list
> ubuntu-users at lists.ubuntu.com
> http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users
> 


-- 
Alex Marten
alex.marten at gmail.com




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