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authorJoachim Nilsson <joachim@gnufans.org>2002-11-20 12:12:12 +0000
committerJoachim Nilsson <joachim@gnufans.org>2002-11-20 12:12:12 +0000
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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ There are three current methods and one depricated methods to install the Hurd:
* Neal Walfield's [guide](http://web.walfield.org/papers/hurd-installation-guide/english/hurd-install-guide.html) is excellent and is available in several formats. This is the guide that the Hurd community always references first. The GNU official [installation page](http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/install.html) is the canonical reference. [[TarballNotes20020816]]
* [CD-ROM iso images](http://www.debian.org/ports/hurd/hurd-cd) CD-ROM installs are becoming more and more popular. The CDs are based on the most current tarball at release time. [[CDNotesJ2]]
-* Bochs is an x86 emulator similar to the commercial VMware (which is not supported). Alfred M Szmidt wrote a [great guide](http://ftp.walfield.org/pub/people/ams/hurd/creating_bochs_image_for_gnu.txt). Oliver also created a GNU/Hurd [bochs image](http://mail.gnu.org/pipermail/bug-hurd/2002-October/010604.html).
+* [[BochsEmulator]] is an x86 emulator similar to the commercial VMware (which is not supported). Alfred M Szmidt wrote a [great guide](http://ftp.walfield.org/pub/people/ams/hurd/creating_bochs_image_for_gnu.txt). Oliver also created a GNU/Hurd [bochs image](http://mail.gnu.org/pipermail/bug-hurd/2002-October/010604.html).
* Once upon a time there was a `cross-install` script that did an installation while running from another system install. While there are spurious &amp; unintentional references to "cross-installs" this is almost always now intended to mean a tarball install.
## <a name="2_Real_Estate_or_Finding_A_Home"> 2. Real Estate or Finding A Home </a>