On 19 April 2018 at 05:04, Always Learning centos@u68.u22.net wrote:
On Thu, 2018-04-19 at 09:40 +0100, John Hodrien wrote:
On Wed, April 18, 2018 8:36 pm, Always Learning wrote:
I have an aversion to using anything that comes from unknown sources, as used by Torrent.
Can we also challenge this "torrents are untrustworthy" attitude.
Having, successfully so far, resisted/repelled several devious attacks from the Russians, I am keen to maintain a clean, and thus secure, system as possible.
You can be given an ISO from a shady character under a railway bridge,
I'd throw it away unused. Do not want the associated risks.
Also, why not just make your life easy and do a netinstall?
That's a good idea. Never done one of them before. I can put C6 on a CD and a USB and boot from either.
That way you don't have to try to do anything you're not comfortable with.
Comfort-ability is not my criteria. The BIOS is supposed to be 4 or 5 years old. It won't boot from DVDs, yet it will boot from zip disks and other historic relics (LH120, I think one of the other choices was).
As with others.. this sounds 15 years old. If it says it is 4 or 5 years old.. I would be more leery of the hardware than torrents. (And I am very very leery of torrents but mostly because I spend time explaining to people that if your university blocks them I can't fix it for you). In any case, I would do the following:
Get a cdrom with CD1 data as this installs 99% of my systems I have dealt with. [I think out of a couple hundred, that 2 or 3 needed anything from the second disk when installing some obscure thing.] The second disk is mostly stuff you can install later. If you need more than that, you need to mirror the distribution locally and set up a pxe/tftpboot system which points to that mirror.