2014-02-12, 10:18
@fritsch:
Just a very very minor question, but your apt line from your first post:
"sudo apt-get install ssh python-software-properties software-properties-common udisks upower xorg alsa-utils mesa-utils git-core librtmp0 lirc libmad0 lm-sensors libmpeg2-4 avahi-daemon libnfs1 consolekit pm-utils libva1 vainfo libva-intel-vaapi-driver i965-va-driver"
is it "clean" in a sense that only the necessary packages are marked with "installed by user"? For example libva1 is necessary for libva-intel-vaapi-driver and will be pulled automatically and the i965 package seems deprecated.
I am asking because I a setting up a new box, and I always had the package creep with ubuntu in the past. While the software center is great for application, if a library is marked as user-installed it won't show up.
When I will get my hardware I will try the shortest apt-get possible.
Just a very very minor question, but your apt line from your first post:
"sudo apt-get install ssh python-software-properties software-properties-common udisks upower xorg alsa-utils mesa-utils git-core librtmp0 lirc libmad0 lm-sensors libmpeg2-4 avahi-daemon libnfs1 consolekit pm-utils libva1 vainfo libva-intel-vaapi-driver i965-va-driver"
is it "clean" in a sense that only the necessary packages are marked with "installed by user"? For example libva1 is necessary for libva-intel-vaapi-driver and will be pulled automatically and the i965 package seems deprecated.
I am asking because I a setting up a new box, and I always had the package creep with ubuntu in the past. While the software center is great for application, if a library is marked as user-installed it won't show up.
When I will get my hardware I will try the shortest apt-get possible.