Hi Guys (and Gals)

I presently have a 164UX/BX4 system (i.e. ruffian), which presently has NT on a 
2G FAT partition, that (dare I say it) I wish to keep, and then a RH6.0 
installation scattered over another half dozen or so partitions (the contents 
of which I have no intention of preserving even a single byte of). I boot into 
Linux via MILO (of the same age as RH6.0). Don't ask me whether I have ARC or 
AlphaBios, as I can't remember how long ago it was I last saw the boot screen.

I wish to be rid of the evil which is redhat 6.0 (*), and rather than play 
disty version-number wars, or "my installation is 2GB bigger than yours", I'd 
rather migrate this machine to Debian.

So, I've had some hairy-scary moments with MILO in the past. I have forgotten 
how I even installed it, let alone how to configure it. Will I need to 
reinstall MILO, or reconfigure it, in order to install and boot Debian? I am 
fully prepared to keep the same root partition (I consider the best thing about 
my current system to be my choice of partitions). If so (runs around flapping 
arms in panic) help! (I can read - web references are good enough, I'm online 
24/7 on my other machines, so can read and hack, try again, read and hack etc.)
Milo resides on my FAT partition, doesn't it?
I simply need to point the Bios console to the new location?

I plan to install with the .tgz base system files on what was and will 
eventually be my /home partition, but I fully appreciate that the install 
process must not touch (write to) that partition during the install process 
(I'll very temporarily have /home on the / partition, I am happy adding fstab 
lines on my own afterwards). 

With all this ARC/AlphaBios/whatever plus Milo nonsense, where do I boot from, 
and how? I know it's either section 6.8 or 6.9 in the documentation, but is it 
both? Do I do 6.8 and then 6.9?
In 6.9 it says I don't have to use a floppy, but surely I can't "boot" off my 
old /home partition can I?. How do I then tell Milo that all the info it used 
to know about my RH system is bogus? (As I said, I've not touched Milo for 
donkey's years, and haven't got a clue how I set it up.)

Anyway, you'll get a flurry of panicky e-mails tomorrow morning (US time), as 
that's when I'm gonna give it a go...
It appears the documentation is pretty good, but I always like to have fine 
details clarified before I do anything potentially dangerous...

Cheers,
Phil

(* Some of the redhat alphalinux advocates have called it far worse than 
'evil', but I'm too polite)

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