Appendix A (X web hosting) . Media 823 ubuntu-5.10-install-i386.iso: Contains
Appendix A . Media 823 ubuntu-5.10-install-i386.iso: Contains the CD image to install a nicely stocked Ubuntu desktop system. systemrescuecd-x86-0.2.15.iso: Contains the System Rescue CD ISO image. This bootable Linux CD can be used to help recover a damaged system or network. slackware-10.1-install-d?.iso: Represents the two Slackware CDs contained on the DVD (replace ? with 1 or 2). The images can be used to install Slackware with a basic X desktop, some server packages, and programming tools. SUSE-10.0-CD-i386-GM-CD?.iso: Represents the five-CD SUSE Linux 10.0 set (replace the ? with a number from 1 to 5). You can use this CD set to install a workable desktop SUSE and server Linux system that includes KDE desktop and a nice set of desktop applications. 4. Open a folder on your hard disk (such as your home directory from a desktop icon) and browse to or create a folder to copy the CD image to. (You ll need between 50MB and 700MB of hard disk space, depending on the disk image you choose.) 5. Drag-and-drop the image to the folder on your hard disk. 6. Close all folders and shells that are open on the DVD or CD, and then unmount and eject the medium (right-click the DVD or CD icon and select Eject). 7. Open a CD/DVD burning application. For this procedure, I recommend K3B CD/DVD Burning Facility (http://www.k3b.org). In Fedora, select the Applications menu and choose Sound & Video.K3b (or type k3b from a Terminal window). The K3b - CD Kreator window appears. 8. From the K3b window, select Tools.CD.Burn CD Image. You are asked to choose an image file. 9. Browse to the image you just copied to hard disk and select it. Once the image you want is selected, the Burn CD Image window appears and does a checksum on the image. (You can compare the checksum number that appears against the number in the MD5SUM file on the DVD for this image, to be sure that the CD image was not corrupted.) Figure A-1 shows the Burn CD Image window ready to burn an image of Damn Small Linux. 10. Insert a blank CD into the CD burner drive, which may be a combination with your DVD drive. (If a CD/DVD Creator window pops up, you can just close it.) 11. Check the settings in the Burn CD Image window (often the defaults are fine, but you may want to slow down the speed if you get some bad burns) and click Start. 12. When the CD is done burning, eject it (or it may eject automatically) and mark it appropriately (information such as the distribution name, version number, and date).
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