> Hi folks! > > I've just finished the hardware part of building my very own PC Compatible > (AMD K5-166, Amptron PM8600 motherboard, 32MB RAM, S3 Trio64+ 2MB video > card, Creative Labs SoundBlaster Vibra16 audio, Hitachi 7730 IDE 4X CD-ROM, > Quantum Bigfoot 4.3GB IDE HD, Teac 1.44MB HD, soon to be getting a Seagate > [Conner] 800MB Tape Drive) and am tweaking Windows95 into submission.
Item per item: Processor: OK motherboard: No idea, probably fine. video: OK. I've heard of some problems with the latest XFree and the S3 server, though ; you may want to check the mailing list archive. sound card: OK. If it's PnP, you'll need isapnptools to configure, unless your BIOS is smart enough to do it. CD-ROM: OK. Hard drive: OK, but be wary of partitions >2GB (it's not your case right now, but you may want to expand) as some Linux utils still have problems I think (it was the case for cfdisk at one time). Tape drive: No idea, but it should be fine if it's an IDE tape. [snip] > Are there still any pitfalls to using Debian Linux with the K5 chip or any > of the other hardware I mentioned above? Eventually I plan on upgrading to As mentioned, shouldn't be any problems AFAIK. > the K6 chip...I've heard some Linux horror stories about the K6 not I upgraded to a K6 last Wenesday. No problems so far, and I've put some load on the system (compiling the kernel with emacs and netscape loaded, while playing Quake... :), though I'll have to make an effort to really load it (32 MB is HARD to fill!). Interestingly enough, Linux gave a few messages about unknown PCI devices but still kept booting and has been working flawlessly since. However, Win95 refused to boot in anything but safe mode after the motherboard upgrade, and I had to reinstall (the lack of diagnostic messages made it totally impossible for me to troubleshoot the problem). Overall, I'm very satisfied with the upgrade so far. Note that I upgraded the whole system unit in one shot (CPU/motherboard/memory). Also note that if your motherboard comes with an USB port, make sure you can disable it through the BIOS setup program ; Linux seems to dislike USBs. > working. Anyone on this list use PowerBoot to dual boot? I'm gonna need a > *lotta support* from you folks, and I promise when I become a Linux guru I > will help the newbies on this list. No idea about how PowerBoot works. I have, however, used the OS/2 Boot Manager while I was still young and innocent. :) If PowerBoot works in a similar way, it's not too difficult to make Linux work with it. Basically, you must install LILO (Linux's own boot loader) in the Linux partition's boot record (*NOT* the master boot record) and point your boot manager to the Linux partition. The boot manager will find LILO, which will boot Linux. You could also use LILO for the whole drive, which is what I'm doing. However, the interface is a bit plain, and if someone who's not used to it tries to boot the computer, it might confuse the hell out of him/her. Good luck with your installation. -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .