Barry Schiffman wrote:
I believe that's the case. In fact, there have been
four updates since the version that's on the box now.
They address a bunch of issues, but nothing quite like
this. Either, I'll hunt up another SATA drive
(presumably Dell sold these with with two drives) or
I'll do the u
--- "David G. Miller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> "Jerry S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> top posted his reply:
>
> > In the BIOS you should also be able to specify the
> boot drive as well.
> >
> > jer
> >
> > Barry Schiffman wrote:
> >
> >> > I have a Dell Precision 360, which has both
> onboard
> >
"Jerry S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> top posted his reply:
In the BIOS you should also be able to specify the boot drive as well.
jer
Barry Schiffman wrote:
> I have a Dell Precision 360, which has both onboard
> SATA and ultra ATA controllers, and I put one of each
> kind of drive into the bays
In the BIOS you should also be able to specify the boot drive as well.
jer
Barry Schiffman wrote:
I have a Dell Precision 360, which has both onboard
SATA and ultra ATA controllers, and I put one of each
kind of drive into the bays to make an experimental
machine with the xen kernel.
After e
>
> I have a Dell Precision 360, which has both onboard
> SATA and ultra ATA controllers, and I put one of each
> kind of drive into the bays to make an experimental
> machine with the xen kernel.
>
> After enabling both of drives, the BIOS recognizes
> each drive, but it fails to boot, giving me
I have a Dell Precision 360, which has both onboard
SATA and ultra ATA controllers, and I put one of each
kind of drive into the bays to make an experimental
machine with the xen kernel.
After enabling both of drives, the BIOS recognizes
each drive, but it fails to boot, giving me the
message "se
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