SCO is Santa Cruz Operation, formerly a Xerox site in Santa Cruz, California. I'd be highly surprised if the driver works in Linux, but the ne2000 driver seems to handle a wide variety of compatible cards. If it doesn't work, ne2000 clones are dirt cheap these days (I paid $10 U.S. for a brand new one last week).
Bob On Wed, May 19, 1999 at 11:17:43PM +0800, Hans van den Boogert wrote: > I have some old ethernet cards (EZ-3200P+ series, which are supposed to be > NE2000 compatible) and the disk with it has a Unix driver, but specifically > an SCO one. What does SCO stand for and might the driver be compatible with > Linux? > > Hans > > P.S. I haven't compiled a new kernel with NE2000 support yet. I was just > wondering. > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > -- Bob Nielsen Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tucson, AZ AMPRnet: [EMAIL PROTECTED] DM42nh http://www.primenet.com/~nielsen