Brian Kendig ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) had this to say on 02/07/03 at 14:42: > Mike Leone wrote: > >yenta_socket is the name of the kernel-level PCMCIA driver. > > What's 'yenta' mean, by the way? Is it the name of one of the chips? > Just curious...
I know the word "yenta" as a slang term. A yenta is a know-it-all, someone who talks a lot, and butts into other's business. I have no idea if the 2 are related. :-) > > >If you do not use the built-in kernel PCMCIA drivers, but instead use > >the full stand-alone PCMCIA-CS package, there is no yenta-socket; you > >must specifiy i82365. > > > The Debian pcmcia-modules package depends on the pcmcia-cs package... > does installing pcmcia-modules remove the i82365 support? I'm just not > clear on the relationship between the two packages. I download the source for the pcmcia-cs package. I don't use the pcmcia-modules package. I always recompile my own kernels, and by hand (not that make-kpkg stuff).
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