YigalB wrote: > So can I do the following: Have an 8MBytes DiskOnKey with a > Linux kernel on it, let the PC boot, load the Kernel, connect to the > internet and download all the rest? Well, you need the appropriate image file, not just a kernel, but yes (under some circumstances). I did it with the boot.iso, a CD-R/W, and Rawhide a few weeks back. > Can I save the need to download the > CDs, burn them and install from them? Yes. > I always wondered why do I need the CDs since it's all there, on the web > anyway. Well, the circumstances do have to be right. Principally, you need a suitable network connection. I've got ADSL, but I use an ADSL router that connects to my computers through Ethernet. So I can just let the install pick up network settings through DHCP, point it at a suitable FTP site [1], and let the router handle the connection to the Net. But the boot images will do little more than that. If you need Fedora to handle PPP authentication (or PPP, I believe), or if you need special drivers for an "ADSL modem", or anything similar, then the boot image just doesn't have the smarts, as far as I am aware. You need Fedora installed so you can get Fedora installed. For a limited install, the overall time is less because you're downloading much less. An FTP (or NFS) install is *really* useful on a campus when used with Kickstart, and you're getting the image from a local mirror. And I've assumed that it was designed mainly for these situations. In those situations, you will have a fast network connection. Hope this helps, James. [1] Which, I suppose, is not technically "on the web". If you care, you can insist on an HTTP mirror... -- E-mail address: james | "Hardware simply does not work like the manual says @westexe.demon.co.uk | and no amount of Zen contemplation will ever make you | at one with a 3c905B ethernet card." | -- Alan Cox