I did just that. I hit "install" took the defaults, did a reboot and got "non-system disk or disk error". Z840 and 4 TB disk. I got that result with both 2020.10.31 and 2021.04.30. What I did is *exactly* what most new users would do. I just checked the other stuff to see if the image was consistent with the instructions.
My first step in building a new system is to do the most basic default install, see what it does and then go from there. Reg On Tuesday, May 4, 2021, 02:59:38 PM CDT, Peter Tribble via openindiana-discuss <openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org> wrote: [snip] Assuming new users hit them. Most users simply take the obvious direct route. If there's a button that says "Install" they'll hit that and completely ignore anything and everything else that might be present. Based on that simple workflow, the current OI gui installer (which I haven't used for ages, but still looks like the original OpenSolaris installer) is good enough. It's pretty much on a par with other distro installers (and I've run dozens of them this year already). It could be a lot quicker, it could be more responsive, but it's not noticeably worse in terms of useability or functionality or reliability than many of the current crop of Linux installers - worse than some, better than some. That's not necessarily a ringing endorsement, but the point is that for most of the target audience the sky isn't falling and I think it echos what someone (Judah?) said - stick to the straight and narrow and life will be easier. -- -Peter Tribble http://www.petertribble.co.uk/ - http://ptribble.blogspot.com/ _______________________________________________ openindiana-discuss mailing list openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss _______________________________________________ openindiana-discuss mailing list openindiana-discuss@openindiana.org https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss