Hi
> > Before you start messing around with new kernels, do yourself > a favor and switch to Grub. Once you get it installed, it is > much easier. Additionally, if you use symlinks like /vmlinuz > and /vmlinuz.old and so on, you can point the symlinks at > newly installed kernels and reboot without reinstalling Grub. > This is because Grub actually reads your filesystem. > When you say switch to Grub, is it as simple as doing: apt-get install grub ? What would be steps after that ? I understand that I am supposed to install a newer kernal but not sure what to do about getting my sound going. - Rathon -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Debian 3.0r1(Woody) | ASUS P5P800 Mobo | ATI Mach64 | Intel P4 3.0GHz Cpu | 1G DDR Ram | -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]