Pardon my Debian ignorance. I've been using RH/FC for a long time. And, well, Slackware before it had SysVinit support. My questions are about getting Zorp installed the Debian way. I got zorp up and running on FC1, but decided to pave it in favor of a Debian install so I can take advantage of your .deb packages for updates. Should I start with 'stable' and a 2.4 kernel or 'testing'? Stable seems to support the Zorp python/glib requirements better than testing. After getting the correct OS installed, should I compile and install a patched kernel and then point apt to your repository and do a dist-upgrade? Or, can I just do a dist-upgrade pointed to your repository and automatically get a pre-compiled kernel? In RH/FC land, kernel upgrades automatically come when running up2date. This doesn't seem to be the default for Debian. Do new binary kernels always have to be manually retrieved and installed in Debian? I think I just need a general roadmap for getting set up to connect to your repository. Really dumb question: Tasksel keeps installing an X environment even when I forgo checking the box. Not a big deal for a development box, but I really don't want this on a production box. Is there an easy way to get a development environment without X? I imagine that you don't even use tasksel. What do you use? Thanks, Phil