It is a filesystem I believe has to do with some type of standard English charater set ISO8859-1 is the Latin 1 character set, and it covers most West <B3> <B3> European languages such as Albanian, Catalan, Danish, Dutch, <B3> <B3> English, Faeroese, Finnish, French, German, Galician, Irish, <B3> <B3> Icelandic, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, and <B3> <B3> Valencian.
Pollywog wrote: > On 11-Mar-99 Craig T. Hancock wrote: > > What it means is that you don't have the iso8859-1 filesystem install you > > have to > > configure that option in your kernel under filesystems > > > > > Yes but I don't even know what that file system is or why I need it. > > -- > Andrew > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null