
No OS boots "any" PC ;-)
Of course, that's why I used "quotes." Anyway, it should boot machines that have nVidia and machines that don't.
List exact steps to get nVidia support.
Yes, Sir!
Some kind of politeness would increase our motivation significantly, at least mine.
I was not impolite; you read too much between the lines. Please, I am sincerely asking for help. I love GRML and want to "do it right" so I don't create a mess out of (my own) ignorance -- and then have to bother GRML with senseless questions. That is why I ask for exact steps.
nVidia support has been a troublesome Linux issue for a long time. I am not an expert, but I know that much about nVidia, which is why I ask exactly how to do it in GRML before changing the user machines. (They complain a lot when things are not right, and I look bad, and GRML looks bad to them.)
There is not a lot of traffic on the GRML mailing list. Also, I do not bother you with "how do I install GNOME?" and such questions. I focus on hardware/driver issues. I do not feel bad asking about those, even if the answer is "obvious" to you.
Just give it a try. BTW: It's not a kernel replacement, just a kernel module.
There is a 1.4M file in GRML repository called nvidia-kernel-2.6.15-grml_1.0.8178-1+grml.07_i386.deb
The file does not say "module" anywhere, so the name confused me. It looks (to me) like a full kernel replacement. Not saying it's wrong, just explaining how I got that impression.
Thank you for the outstanding work on GRML 0.6 everyone.
Mark