On Fri, 2005-10-28 at 10:24, William Hooper wrote: > > > > The install environment wouldn't change. It would still have the same > > packages as the original installer did. This would only change if for some > > reason a package was split. > > If the install environment won't change, then you can't use an updated > kernel or X during the install, let alone an updated version of Anaconda. > That means most (if not all) of the install bugs won't be fixed. What was > the point of creating new ISOs again? Those things could change if the bugs were bad enough or anyone cared about the user's results (call it the 'fedora experience). But the main point of the new ISOs would be to avoid most of the update downloads on every new install - recently reported at 899 megs/machine, I think. Is that a good first impression? And, it would fix any runtime problems that affect the ability to get to a point where you are able to complete that update like the recently mentioned X issue. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx