I have a laptop physically set aside for _experimenting_ with install parameters to determine my optimum configuration. One install will duplicate as closely as possible whatever comes with some donated hardware for the church's after school program for pre-teens.

The combination of running the Debian Installer with as many defaults as possible and Grub2 being automatically installed each time results in two annoying characteristics.

ONE:
On boot, the the last system installed will be the default. That is the least likely one to run correctly (IF AT ALL) due to bad choices during install or subsequent tweaking. Resulting Grub rescue mode ... ;/

TWO:
When there are multiple Debian installs present, especially when same kernel used, the Grub menu is not informative.

QUESTION_ONE:
Can I force the boot to default to the oldest rather than newest install. It will always be a functioning install and usually is completely normal with ONLY defaults chosen.

QUESTION_TWO:
Is there an automatic way for the Grub menu to display the associated partition label instead of the kernel id? the partition designation (sda1 ... sda8 etc) would be minimally acceptable.

I could manually edit the configuration file which advises "DO NT EDIT" ;/
I do occasionally try to follow convention :)

TIA


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