<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div><div>So many of you know that my current computer (a Thinkpad x30, which I am using to send this email) was generously given by Jason, and set up with Debian/XFCE by the GLUG. It is close to being a comfortable setup, just a couple kinks to work out (which I might comment on later in this email).<br>
<br>My mother also had a computer, a Dell Inspiron 1370 (I do not have it in front of me, so it may be a different number, but it was something like that) which she bought for $150 from a friend whose business loans computers and gives assistance. I <i>guess</i> that is a good price; on one hand, it is fairly old (I am guessing ten years, although I am not sure when the Pentium 4 came out / was retired, or the same for the Inspiron model itself), slow (with even a stripping-down of Windows, it was running about even or slower with the x30 netbook), and physically large & clunky, but on the other hand it probably was an above-average computer when it came out, having two CPUs. My mother bought it because increasingly, people in her line of work (electrical contracting) want to communicate online, send documents, receive bids, and so on.<br>
</div><br>The point is, it came with Windows XP. My mother was taking a class at the community college (Introduction to Business Computing, which was basically an overview of Windows Explorer and Microsoft Office - Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access) that required Windows to be installed so that Microsoft Office could run, but with my encouragement and the looming (now past) end-of-support for XP, she agreed to let me install Linux on it after the class finished.<br>
<br></div>Well, invigorated by the newly-mostly-working laptop I had, I set to work straightaway, using the installation disc left over from when Jason and I installed Debian on the x30 and an Ethernet cable at the Southside library* to get additional packages.<br>
<br>Then I started it up, and it went through the usual things (which I detail in an attached file) except that, when it got to what would be the login prompt, only a black (but backlit) screen appeared.<br><br></div>Wondering whether I can fix this or whether I should install something else. Anyway, I have to go so I will have to provide some more details in a second email later, but if anyone wants to contact me, my number is (obfuscated for [lazy] automated spam because we have a public archive) five-oh-five nine-eight-two two-four-seven-two - I am still working on the Internet connectivity situation at my house.<br>
<br></div><div>Cheers,<br></div>-Arlo<br><br></div>*which is very nice for sitting and working, as they have booths with power and RJ45 (and phone) plugs. Except they seem to be having some trouble with their networking setup also, because their guest WiFi network, although there, was not accepting connections, and at one point a librarian came around and asked everyone to unplug their cables (thankfully at a stage when the Debian installer did not need connectivity) because they were having an 'IP [address assignment, presumably] collision'.<br>
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