On Tue, Oct 10, 2000 at 08:03:09PM -0700, Heather wrote:
> Try adding
> append="apm=on"
> to your lilo.conf stanza for your kernel.
Already tried that, no effect.
> Often reserved at the end of disk. beware of accidentally writing over it
> if you haven;t found it...
There was a tiny (16
> On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 09:08:11AM -0700, Heather wrote:
> > If it is a typical Phoenix BIOS, raw partitions for hibernate can be
> > anywhere on the disk. This isn't just "known" this is tested, as I've
> > got a quite happy machine with a partition smack in the middle. (I was
> > moving it a
I have a gateway solo 2150 and rarely does it reboot correctly when I tell it
to shutdown and reboot (eithe via 'shutdown -r now' or selecting it from kdm).
It shuts everything down, but when it goes to tell the BIOS to reboot it
hangs and I geta whitish/blank screen and it is hung. Turning the po
On Tue, Oct 10, 2000 at 07:43:25PM -0500, Jerome Mrozak wrote:
> internet through ppp0 and now want to connect to the WinNT network at my
> employer. That network uses DHCP to assign addresses.
>
you need to specify in your /etc/pcmcia/network.opts to use dhcp. I use pump,
so make sure the lin
Mounie G quoth apon Tue, Oct 10, 2000 at 09:46:49PM +0200:
>
> Hi,
>
> I have bought for my old HP800 CT (P100) a low end
> 10/100 PCMCIA network card (kingmax). It had a nice
> sticker on it: windows 2000 and **linux** ready.
> (There is no Windows on my laptop)
I bought the exact same networ
On Tue, Oct 10, 2000 at 08:03:09PM -0700, Heather wrote:
> Try adding
> append="apm=on"
> to your lilo.conf stanza for your kernel.
Already tried that, no effect.
> Often reserved at the end of disk. beware of accidentally writing over it
> if you haven;t found it...
There was a tiny (1
> On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 09:08:11AM -0700, Heather wrote:
> > If it is a typical Phoenix BIOS, raw partitions for hibernate can be
> > anywhere on the disk. This isn't just "known" this is tested, as I've
> > got a quite happy machine with a partition smack in the middle. (I was
> > moving it
On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 09:08:11AM -0700, Heather wrote:
> If it is a typical Phoenix BIOS, raw partitions for hibernate can be
> anywhere on the disk. This isn't just "known" this is tested, as I've
> got a quite happy machine with a partition smack in the middle. (I was
> moving it around mess
On Tue, Oct 10, 2000 at 07:43:25PM -0500, Jerome Mrozak wrote:
> internet through ppp0 and now want to connect to the WinNT network at my
> employer. That network uses DHCP to assign addresses.
>
you need to specify in your /etc/pcmcia/network.opts to use dhcp. I use pump, so make
sure the li
I'm having a hard time wrapping myself around networking, Samba and my
laptop. I know it shouldn't be this hard, but my situation isn't really
handled in the docs, as far as I can tell.
I have a potato installation on a ThinkPad. The PCMCIA card works OK in
Win98 and is recognized within Linux (
On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 09:08:11AM -0700, Heather wrote:
> If it is a typical Phoenix BIOS, raw partitions for hibernate can be
> anywhere on the disk. This isn't just "known" this is tested, as I've
> got a quite happy machine with a partition smack in the middle. (I was
> moving it around mes
I'm having a hard time wrapping myself around networking, Samba and my
laptop. I know it shouldn't be this hard, but my situation isn't really
handled in the docs, as far as I can tell.
I have a potato installation on a ThinkPad. The PCMCIA card works OK in
Win98 and is recognized within Linux
Hi,
I have bought for my old HP800 CT (P100) a low end
10/100 PCMCIA network card (kingmax). It had a nice
sticker on it: windows 2000 and **linux** ready.
(There is no Windows on my laptop)
I plugged it in, but I have continuously
"eth0: Reentering the interrupt handler! isr=0x0
imr=
Hi,
I have bought for my old HP800 CT (P100) a low end
10/100 PCMCIA network card (kingmax). It had a nice
sticker on it: windows 2000 and **linux** ready.
(There is no Windows on my laptop)
I plugged it in, but I have continuously
"eth0: Reentering the interrupt handler! isr=0x0
imr
Soundblaster "compatible" usually means that the card works in a similar
fashion to a soundblaster in Windows but not under other OSes. Try
finding what crystal card you have and then look for a driver matching the
model. Look at the vendors site and try to find out what chip it uses,
lspci could g
I have some problems with my Notebook Satellite 1605. The sound of it
is compatible with Sound Blaster is a sound board Crystal.
It would like a solution for my problem.
Thanks.
Soundblaster "compatible" usually means that the card works in a similar
fashion to a soundblaster in Windows but not under other OSes. Try
finding what crystal card you have and then look for a driver matching the
model. Look at the vendors site and try to find out what chip it uses,
lspci could
I have some problems with my Notebook Satellite 1605. The sound of it
is compatible with Sound Blaster is a sound board Crystal.
It would like a solution for my problem.
Thanks.
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Hello,
I am quite a junior user of Debian. I have tried to istall it
on my old Compaq Armada 1540. There is no particular problem with Linux but X
Windows is not working properly. I am starting X with GNOME + Enlightenment. It
starts but shortly after X shuts down with an SIGSEGV. Anybody k
Hello,
I am quite a junior user of Debian. I have tried to istall it
on my old Compaq Armada 1540. There is no particular problem with Linux but X
Windows is not working properly. I am starting X with GNOME + Enlightenment. It
starts but shortly after X shuts down with an SIGSEGV. Anybody k
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