On 27/11/2007, Adam Sweet <adam(a)adamsweet.org> wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
Kevanf1 wrote:
>
> Hmm, I actually quite liked both 10.1 and 10.2 but, to be absolutely
> honest I did not use either very much. I cannot remember just how far
> in it got before dying. I remember seeing it probing for USB devices
> and then going on from there. That's it. I was froze (this was
> yesterday afternoon in my workshop) and I just wanted to get back in
> the house.
Sorry, am behind on my LUG mail...
Try booting it with various kernel parameters, like noapic, noacpi or
noauto. These are detailed by hitting F1, F2, F3 etc at the installer's
boot prompt. These options are normally passed to the installer at the
boot prompt in the form:
linux <options>
Such as
linux noacpi
Ultimately though, it may make no difference if your hardware isn't
supported by the kernel used by the installer.
Also try booting without the splash screen and 'CTRL-alt'ing between F1
and F6 during the installation as they contain diagnostic, boot and
installer output.
Regards,
Adam Sweet
Cheers Adam :-) Actually, I should have thought of trying those. At
the time I was so bloody cold I couldn't be bothered :-) A couple of
days later I got it installed on my old, old PC (500mhz AMD K7 with
256mb of RAM). It took forever to install but now that it's on it
runs actually quite nicely :-) On the original PC I tried it on
Kubuntu is fine but absolutely no other distro will install. It's
probably a vagary of one of the options you suggested. No matter as
I'll keep it solely running Kubuntu, it's happy with that and so am I
:-)
--
==============================================
Kevan Farmer
Linux user #373362
Staffordshire