

- #INSTALL ITUNES 11 WITHOUT BLOATWARE HOW TO#
- #INSTALL ITUNES 11 WITHOUT BLOATWARE INSTALL#
- #INSTALL ITUNES 11 WITHOUT BLOATWARE MANUAL#
Of course it is windows10 or win10spyware is just a mess.
#INSTALL ITUNES 11 WITHOUT BLOATWARE INSTALL#
I usually only install the standard system utilities in tasksel, finish the install, and then install the minimal metapackage kde-plasma-desktop (from the CLI) and build from there. Yes, it is probably easiest to just make an ISO if you want to install third party software. (Still very lean compared to a 20 GiB Windows install.) I have 2662 packages installed on this computer. or, to find the files where in the Debian install the packages are listed so I can delete some posts an to add my own posts and deb files. the problem is to either find a program/GUI that can edit installs. that's why I want to edit the install ISO as I do with windows install.wim. Just copying whatever that's running is out of the question, as I have no system to copy. I don't read english as fast as i do swedish.ĭo you know where in the documentation they mention what files to edit and what folders to put the new deb packages in? it is massive documentation it will take me a day or two to read.
#INSTALL ITUNES 11 WITHOUT BLOATWARE MANUAL#
It's just like MX Linux's "re-master" tool but requires manual configuration rather than just copying whatever is running. Creating a custom desktop is as easy as setting a few options in configuration files and adding a package list (just like manyroads').
#INSTALL ITUNES 11 WITHOUT BLOATWARE HOW TO#
Marie SWE wrote: ↑ 00:05Is this about how to make an own ISO? to remove and add packages? Sometimes I think that out of the box installs with no customization's or even a local network probably is the ultimate relief/blessing you can have in life. it's often the "figuring out" part that is the hard part with Linux. it will probably be a relatively easy solution. and I guess once we figure out how to do it. if they can, it has to be possible to add/remove packages in the ISO afterwards. and my OEM software I have to customize/manipulate widows ISOs will probably not work on an DebianISOīut is has to be possible, as the Debian developers add packages to the install ISO. So I do feel a bit frustrated that I know how to add/remove apps and do custom registry rewrites in a windows install ISO (the wim file) but not how to do it with a Linux ISO. as I have custom resolutions and multiple screens. I can copy&paste some of them, but the fstab I will have to manually edit to get my networkdrives.

but i never found a way to cut corners there.

I hope it will work as that will save a lot of time. (1= first to fifth computer) to try restore my custom desktop settings. before the install and then after the install: dconf load / < custom-1-de. I will though use: dconf dump / < custom-1-de. I even consider the cloning way, but all computers have different disksize, hardware, screen setups, network-access. deb packages that isn't in debians repos. So perhaps I can use the custom install 10-20 times in those 5years. to remove and add packages to make future installs easier and all my now 5computer installs. and it ended with that it is probably easier to make my own custom install ISO. I had an open chat in another forum to find ways to cut corners to new installs. It had 1400 / 1500+ packages on my debian install I have now. Code: Select all xargs -a packages.txt apt-get install
