On Sun, Sep 17, 2000 at 01:18:21PM -0400, Anand Saxena wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> This should be an easy one to answer. When I print ascii files, I often
> get word-overflow. In other words, a word at the end of a line gets
> split between that line and the next like this:
>
> Printing ASCII shou
On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Drew Parsons wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 15, 2000 at 07:39:38AM -0700, Jared Valentine wrote:
> >
> > If you want the full throughput, you need a Cardbus PC Card instead.
> >
>
> Actually, I once read somewhere that even the 32bit Cardbus cards are
> limited to 80 Mb/s.
80 Mb/s
On Mon, Sep 18, 2000 at 09:31:50AM +0200, Bart-Jan Vrielink wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Drew Parsons wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Sep 15, 2000 at 07:39:38AM -0700, Jared Valentine wrote:
> > >
> > > If you want the full throughput, you need a Cardbus PC Card instead.
> > >
> >
> > Actually, I once re
On Fri, Sep 15, 2000 at 10:12:55AM -0700, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote:
> A laptop's LCD screen is only good for one resolution. I throw a wide
> range of numbers at it and it picks the only one that works.
Both laptops I've worked with could handle different resolutions. The
older, Pentium 120 lap
> This is why the fixed dot-clock makes sense: the display card is always
> outputting 1024x768 - which is also why the hsync and vsync are pretty
> meaningless. (As long as I enter any "valid" modeline, the card will
> work at that resolution, with a dotclock of 65.15, and xvidtune will
> report a
Hi folks,
is there anyone out there who has experiences with the Toshiba Portege
(I own a 7020CT) and Toshiba's original PCMCIA cd-rom device (24x for
PCMCIA, ParPort and USB)?
I read and tried so much now that I would appreciate every single hint like
'Forget it' or 'Have a look at ...'. If it's
Can anyone help me?
I get unresolved symbols in these modules:
epic_cb.o and parport_cs.o
in /lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/
when I compile a custom kernel. I have tried to compile the PCMCIA modules
as well (not using the pcmcia-modules package) but that doesn't help. I've
tried with both make-kp
Drew Parsons wrote:
>
> I don't know if it's quite what you're looking for, but a2ps is a decent
> formatting program which handles text files in nice ways ready for printing.
I use "enscript" for this purpose. It works quite well.
--Greg
A particularily light window manager is FLWM (Fast and Light WM) which
is included with Debian as of 2.2/Potato. Check it out at
flwm.sourceforge.net. I currently have two desktops running and the
memory footprint is 750 kb. I am a BIG fan of FLWM and here are a
couple of reasons:
o lightweig
* Ole Sebastian Stein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [000918 19:48]:
> I get unresolved symbols in these modules:
>
> epic_cb.o and parport_cs.o
>
> in /lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/
If you are using the original potato pcmcia packages (3.1.8?), this a
known problem.
AFAIK, you have no problem if you don't n
heya listers,
Are ther pcmcia cards (ethernet cards 10/100) wiht two interface on the
same card?
pcmcia II that is, cause if it's pcmcia III you can just put in 2 II cards
as well.
I know they exists with eth and modem.
---
Andor Demarteau
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
---
unsubscribe
unsubscribe
On Sun, Sep 17, 2000 at 01:18:21PM -0400, Anand Saxena wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> This should be an easy one to answer. When I print ascii files, I often
> get word-overflow. In other words, a word at the end of a line gets
> split between that line and the next like this:
>
> Printing ASCII sho
On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Drew Parsons wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 15, 2000 at 07:39:38AM -0700, Jared Valentine wrote:
> >
> > If you want the full throughput, you need a Cardbus PC Card instead.
> >
>
> Actually, I once read somewhere that even the 32bit Cardbus cards are
> limited to 80 Mb/s.
80 Mb/
On Mon, Sep 18, 2000 at 09:31:50AM +0200, Bart-Jan Vrielink wrote:
> On Fri, 15 Sep 2000, Drew Parsons wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Sep 15, 2000 at 07:39:38AM -0700, Jared Valentine wrote:
> > >
> > > If you want the full throughput, you need a Cardbus PC Card instead.
> > >
> >
> > Actually, I once r
On Fri, Sep 15, 2000 at 10:12:55AM -0700, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote:
> A laptop's LCD screen is only good for one resolution. I throw a wide
> range of numbers at it and it picks the only one that works.
Both laptops I've worked with could handle different resolutions. The
older, Pentium 120 la
> This is why the fixed dot-clock makes sense: the display card is always
> outputting 1024x768 - which is also why the hsync and vsync are pretty
> meaningless. (As long as I enter any "valid" modeline, the card will
> work at that resolution, with a dotclock of 65.15, and xvidtune will
> report
Hi folks,
is there anyone out there who has experiences with the Toshiba Portege
(I own a 7020CT) and Toshiba's original PCMCIA cd-rom device (24x for
PCMCIA, ParPort and USB)?
I read and tried so much now that I would appreciate every single hint like
'Forget it' or 'Have a look at ...'. If it'
Can anyone help me?
I get unresolved symbols in these modules:
epic_cb.o and parport_cs.o
in /lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/
when I compile a custom kernel. I have tried to compile the PCMCIA modules
as well (not using the pcmcia-modules package) but that doesn't help. I've
tried with both make-k
Drew Parsons wrote:
>
> I don't know if it's quite what you're looking for, but a2ps is a decent
> formatting program which handles text files in nice ways ready for printing.
I use "enscript" for this purpose. It works quite well.
--Greg
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with
A particularily light window manager is FLWM (Fast and Light WM) which
is included with Debian as of 2.2/Potato. Check it out at
flwm.sourceforge.net. I currently have two desktops running and the
memory footprint is 750 kb. I am a BIG fan of FLWM and here are a
couple of reasons:
o lightwei
* Ole Sebastian Stein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [000918 19:48]:
> I get unresolved symbols in these modules:
>
> epic_cb.o and parport_cs.o
>
> in /lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/
If you are using the original potato pcmcia packages (3.1.8?), this a
known problem.
AFAIK, you have no problem if you don't
heya listers,
Are ther pcmcia cards (ethernet cards 10/100) wiht two interface on the
same card?
pcmcia II that is, cause if it's pcmcia III you can just put in 2 II cards
as well.
I know they exists with eth and modem.
---
Andor Demarteau
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
---
--
To UNSUBSCRI
unsubscribe
unsubscribe
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