At least the information is readily available. Someone needs to research and learn what they're doing and it's well documented online. ![]() What do you have in the sources.list file ? Did you use an iso with non-free ? Anyway long way of saying, doing a minimal base install is not something newish user friendly. Because I hadn't had internet during the install, nor the packages needed to get some of the systems hardware working properly. Also have many times had to manually populate sources aka: /etc/apt/sources.list with the correct repositories. Have more than once used another distro's iso in live session, which did support my wireless/internet out-of-box and then chrooted a Debian install to be able to install the packages needed to get the system working. Used another gnu/Linux OS on the system that was already setup to download and install software to the OS missing packages. Then install them in one of few methods, ie: Download and install from a usb thumbdrive etc. Then you have to figure out which packages are needed to get the internet working, what drivers-firmware the computer needs to work properly. If you don't have networking working during the install process, don't choose a mirror/sources. Waiting for you to install and setup what's necessary to get the OS where you want it to be. ![]() That's what you end up with when you do a minimal base install, the cli. No it's not a bug, guessing you just find yourself totally out of your depth.
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