Hello, There has been a thread <http://lists.debian.org/debian-laptop/2002/debian-laptop-200206/msg0034 0.html> on debian-laptop the last few days about the wording of the PCMCIA message towards the end of the Woody installation. It says:
"It seems your system doesn't need PCMCIA. It was installed with the rest of the kernel, but can be removed now." How does the installation seem to know that I don't need PCMCIA (and I assume that this is talking about the pcmcia-cs package), but it says "with the rest of the kernel" which confused me at first (did it mean pcmcia kernel modules?). With installing on a laptop from CD (in my case, I'm using the Mini-CD from <http://www.psy.penn.edu/debian-cd>), and I connect to the Internet using a mini-PCI NIC, so it's possible that the installer never even knows that I have PCMCIA. That might be the case, but the current wording seems to indicate that the installer has tried and not detected PCMCIA, and asks to remove it. Is there a better method of detecting PCMCIA, or just a better wording, maybe: "You have not used PCMCIA at all during this installation. Would you like to remove the pcmcia-cs package now?" I did a search on this list and I didn't see anything of relevance. Am I missing something? Also, please CC me as I am not subscribed to this list, I'd appreciate it. Thank you! Jeremy -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]