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Re: Thanks Danny
by Morty on Monday 19/Mar/2007, @12:32
Since I lived for over 5 years without direct internet connection at home, the copying of some files was the medtod I used to update my linux distributions. Including the KDE 2 and 3 betas, so I have no problem imagine this :-)

As long as you don't get random files, but the whole upgrade sets. Combined with your install media, weird dependencies are not a particulary big problem. Staying away from clueless packagers helps of course, and people distributing check-install packages.
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Re: Thanks Danny
by fromthewrongcountry on Monday 19/Mar/2007, @13:26
ok Morty i am not savvy as you, i was speaking in the contexte of a powerless user as me

friendly

i hope we are not abusing the dot ;)
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  • Re: Thanks Danny
    by superstoned on Tuesday 20/Mar/2007, @02:40
    well, it also depends a little on the distro you're using. Suse for example offers KDE updates in a seperate foder on their FTP - just copy the whole content, take it home, and upgrade your KDE. But debian doesn't have that, so you can't do that. Kubuntu DOES have a seperate folder again...

    But yes, it's harder than Mac OS X' way. Linux simply isn't designed around 'I have no internet connection'...
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    • Re: Thanks Superstoned
      by djouallah mimoune on Tuesday 20/Mar/2007, @06:15
      Superstoned

      Al least someone can understand my frustration with installing software in Linux, I think you understand exactly my point.

      Thanks
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