Time was when I had a copy of debian linux that I used to install on my retro pcs. It was great, I could run a different OS, learns new things etc., and it seemed to support everything I had. I even installed it on an se/30 mac.
Then one day a new release came along, like a fool I upgraded, then I found my sound card [Turtle Beach Santa Cruz] was no longer supported. I could try to adapt the previous release's code... yeah right, tried that kinda thing to keep some other software running in consecutive releases, what can happen is you fix one thing and break 4 others. Ok I learn to live with this problem, which for the Santa Cruz is caused by the need for non-open-sourcel drivers or some such. Well, actually I just stopped using Debian for audio work...
Fast forward to the present. I put together an old P4 box, based on a Soyo board. Debian 5.0 installs as far as getting an ip address.. no dice. Unsupported network hardware. Can't install.
So I download the latest debian release, same. I try installing it in a VM on a different machine. Same. This is about open-source drivers afaik - if it ain't open source then it's not in the net install.
No, I'm not going to try anything else. There is a principle here about having something that installs easily. Debian can take their distro and shove it, life is too short and yeah I doubt they'll miss me.
Then one day a new release came along, like a fool I upgraded, then I found my sound card [Turtle Beach Santa Cruz] was no longer supported. I could try to adapt the previous release's code... yeah right, tried that kinda thing to keep some other software running in consecutive releases, what can happen is you fix one thing and break 4 others. Ok I learn to live with this problem, which for the Santa Cruz is caused by the need for non-open-sourcel drivers or some such. Well, actually I just stopped using Debian for audio work...
Fast forward to the present. I put together an old P4 box, based on a Soyo board. Debian 5.0 installs as far as getting an ip address.. no dice. Unsupported network hardware. Can't install.
So I download the latest debian release, same. I try installing it in a VM on a different machine. Same. This is about open-source drivers afaik - if it ain't open source then it's not in the net install.
No, I'm not going to try anything else. There is a principle here about having something that installs easily. Debian can take their distro and shove it, life is too short and yeah I doubt they'll miss me.