On Sun, 8 Feb 2004 00:54, "Jon Fawcett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Now I have XP, and my recently purchased DVD burner, when connected,
> disconnects a second or two later. I presume that this is a subtle driver
> issue to do with currents through wires acknowledged or something...
>
> Any ideas
On Sun, 8 Feb 2004 00:54, "Jon Fawcett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Now I have XP, and my recently purchased DVD burner, when connected,
> disconnects a second or two later. I presume that this is a subtle driver
> issue to do with currents through wires acknowledged or something...
>
> Any ideas
Hi, hope you can help me you seem to know what you
are talking about (please dont lose me though)
Have a PCMCIA ieee1394 card, 3 years old, designed
for win98se presumably.
Now I have XP, and my recently purchased DVD
burner, when connected, disconnects a second or two later. I presume th
Hi, hope you can help me you seem to know what you
are talking about (please dont lose me though)
Have a PCMCIA ieee1394 card, 3 years old, designed
for win98se presumably.
Now I have XP, and my recently purchased DVD
burner, when connected, disconnects a second or two later. I presume th
Appears the texas controller needs to be configured as a yenta_socket in the
pcmcia config!
Andy
On Saturday 17 January 2004 12:34 pm, Andrew Neillans wrote:
> Debian Unstable
> Kernel 2.6.1, as downloaded from kernel.org
> PCMCIA support enabled and compiled as modules.
>
> Laptop is a NEC Vers
Appears the texas controller needs to be configured as a yenta_socket in the
pcmcia config!
Andy
On Saturday 17 January 2004 12:34 pm, Andrew Neillans wrote:
> Debian Unstable
> Kernel 2.6.1, as downloaded from kernel.org
> PCMCIA support enabled and compiled as modules.
>
> Laptop is a NEC Vers
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