diff --git a/chapter02/download.xml b/chapter02/download.xml
index 451457ec4..b6ffa3edb 100644
--- a/chapter02/download.xml
+++ b/chapter02/download.xml
@@ -5,17 +5,19 @@
Throughout this document, we will assume that all the
packages that were downloaded are placed somewhere in $LFS/usr/src.
-A convention you could use is having a $LFS/usr/src/sources directory.
-Under sources, you can create the directory 0-9 and the directories a
-through z. A package like sysvinit-&sysvinit-version;.tar.bz2 is stored under
-$LFS/usr/src/sources/s/. A package like bash-&bash-version;.tar.bz2 is stored
-under $LFS/usr/src/sources/b/, and so forth.
+While it doesn't matter at all where you save the downloaded
+packages, we recommend storing it at least on the LFS partition. This just
+makes sense because you would still have access to those files when you boot
+into the LFS system. $LFS/usr/src is just a logical place to store source
+code, but by no means a requirement. You may even want to create a
+subdirectory under $LFS/usr/src for tarball storage. That way you can
+seperate tarballs from temporary build directories, but again that's up
+to you.
-The next chapter contains the list of all the packages that need to be
-downloaded, but the partition that is going to contain our LFS system isn't
-created yet. Therefore, you should store the files somewhere else and later
-on move them to $LFS/usr/src/ when the chapter in which the new partition is
-prepared has been finished.
+The next chapter contains a list of all the packages that need to be
+downloaded. The LFS partition isn't created yet, so you can't store it
+there yet. Just save it elsewhere for now, and when the LFS partition is
+created, move them over.
diff --git a/index.xml b/index.xml
index 9b99e930a..98f48a9b3 100644
--- a/index.xml
+++ b/index.xml
@@ -4,8 +4,8 @@
-
-
+
+