Brian Kelsay wrote: > By the way, dselect is one ugly beast. They need to group packages > better and allow the user to collapse whole trees of stuff. Nothing The way you tame dselect at least on an initial install is to go and select the final packages you want, for example select gnome-desktop-environment and let dselect worry about the dependencies and stuff. Don't go through and pick every single package you think gnome depends on. This way you still get to say yes/no to the packages dselect picks for you and you don't have to deal with getting all the dependencies right. Also you don't have to wade through the list of packages in alphabetical order, dselect has some nifty vi bindings (don't know about emacs), and will let you search for a package with the standard /. It is a little daunting at first, but read through the help screens and you will soon grow to love it! —-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep in mind I was doing this after midnight. The help files were making my head woozy and I couldn't easily find the controls to use. I figured a couple of them out though. I accidentally hit a key and skipped over the beginning instructions in the middle of reading them. Right after that I spilled a coke on my laptop. That woke me up. After drying it off and getting Debian to continue installing packages I went to bed in disgust. Deselect could be vastly improved with a different color scheme. I don't know how color-blind people handle it and better controls that stand out at the bottom of the screen. Brian Kelsay