RE: Boot hangs at 'Starting PCMCIA services: modules' on ThinkPad i1476

1999-09-13 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Just wanted to let you know that I've found out how to work around this. During the installation, you need to configure PCMCIA and set an option for the controller. Set it to: irq_list=3,4,7,11 and all will be well. Thanks to all who responded. -- Olaf

RE: Boot hangs at 'Starting PCMCIA services: modules' on ThinkPad i1476

1999-09-13 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Just wanted to let you know that I've found out how to work around this. During the installation, you need to configure PCMCIA and set an option for the controller. Set it to: irq_list=3,4,7,11 and all will be well. Thanks to all who responded. -- Olaf Meeuwissen

Re: Boot hangs at 'Starting PCMCIA services: modules' on ThinkPad i1476

1999-09-09 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Earlier I wrote: >Dear friends, > >I've installed a dual-boot system (hamm/that other OS) on a brand-new >ThinkPad i1476 without any trouble, but the first boot hangs on > >Starting PCMCIA services: modules > >I'm suspecting that the built-in Lucent Win Modem is w

Re: Boot hangs at 'Starting PCMCIA services: modules' on ThinkPad i1476

1999-09-09 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Earlier I wrote: >Dear friends, > >I've installed a dual-boot system (hamm/that other OS) on a brand-new >ThinkPad i1476 without any trouble, but the first boot hangs on > >Starting PCMCIA services: modules > >I'm suspecting that the built-in Lucent Win Modem is wrecking havoc, >but don't h

RE: Boot hangs at 'Starting PCMCIA services: modules' on ThinkPad i1476

1999-09-09 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Hans van den Boogert wrote: >It is probably the PCMCIA start up script (in /etc/init.d). Try to >rename it to x-pcmcia. If you can boot then start reading the PCMCIA >HOWTO. That's easier said than done if you can't get at a shell prompt :-) However, I've found out that b

RE: Boot hangs at 'Starting PCMCIA services: modules' on ThinkPad i1476

1999-09-09 Thread Olaf Meeuwissen
Hans van den Boogert wrote: >It is probably the PCMCIA start up script (in /etc/init.d). Try to >rename it to x-pcmcia. If you can boot then start reading the PCMCIA >HOWTO. That's easier said than done if you can't get at a shell prompt :-) However, I've found out that booting with a different