On 21.10.2001 at 19:58:48, Andrew Pollock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Has anyone else had any experience with getting this brand of adapter
working
> under Linux?
I emailed the author of the pegasus USB ethernet driver, and it basically
boiled
down to hacking pegasus.h to be aware of the USB v
On Monday, 22. October 2001 21.15, Andy Bastien wrote:
> In the depths of that dark day Mon Oct 22, the words of Andy Toenz were the
beacon:
> > Hi there,
> >
> > i have a problem with my HP Omnibook XE3. The Computer locks on random
> > times completely. No SysRq, no Keyboard Led's (e.g. Caps-Loc
On Mon, Oct 22, 2001 at 02:36:50PM +0200, Wolfgang Fuschlberger wrote:
> On Mon, 22 Oct 2001, Michael Hothorn wrote:
>
> cp /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwertz/de-latin1-nodeadkeys.kmap.gz
> /etc/console/boottime.kmap.gz
>
> should help
Or, use the debconf GUI:
# dpkg-reconfigure console-common
Chr
Tom Allison wrote:
Chris Halls wrote:
On Mon, Oct 22, 2001 at 07:02:07AM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
I'll start looking toward 2.4.12 to see if that is better behaved.
At least I have an idea what to look for!
2.4.12 works great with IrDA in FIR mode on my T20.
Chris
I'll be downloadi
Tom Allison wrote:
Um... I've been working on this irda stuff for a while and figured out
one thing that I did a while back...
I think I deleted /dev/irda.
I can't find the mknod major/minor setting to recreate it.
Can anyone look on theirs or send me a link?
UPDATE
linux kernel 2.4.9 is
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:48:55AM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
> I have attached a dump of the syslog from 'irda start' and it's working!
> I'm so happy!
Well done!
>
> I have one question though -- my baud rate is reported at 9600.
> For a palm pilot Vx, can I turn this up? How High?
Are you sure
Has anyone configure XF86Config-4
for supporting an external monitor.
I'm running woody in a Toshiba satellite 1800/S253
and the Xserver is Xfree86 4
thanx
talueguito
raul
--
Fight to the Light. || Fight to the Lig
Hi!
I need help, with compiling kernel module for following PCMCIA card:
Planet Realtek ENW-3504FC. I am using Debian 2.2r0 Potato and kernel 2.4.
I've already downloaded source files and precompiled modules from
their site, but insmod says, that the module was compiled against kernel
In the depths of that dark day Tue Oct 23, the words of Andy Toenz were the
beacon:
> On Monday, 22. October 2001 21.15, Andy Bastien wrote:
> > In the depths of that dark day Mon Oct 22, the words of Andy Toenz were the
> beacon:
> > > Hi there,
> > >
> > > i have a problem with my HP Omnibook X
Well, I am disappointed to discover that my new Tecra 8200 has a wonky
winmodem. (I had been holding out some hope that it would be a Lucent
winmodem and I'd be able to get drivers for it.)
Does the following output from lspci tell anyone anything? Does
anyone know of a driver for the thing in t
On Tuesday, 23. October 2001 15.19, Andy Bastien wrote:
> > I don't have a switch "like" speedstep in my BIOS (Phoenix 4.0)
>
> Somewhere in the CMOS settings there should be a speedstep setting.
> How exactly you get to it varies among laptops, so I can't tell you
> exactly where it is, but if you
OK, we are now a couple of people here on the list who are struggling with
random crashes of our laptops. The standard solution is to disable SpeedStep
in the BIOS. Until now this haven't helped on my machine, but I have many
SpeedStep settings and I still haven't tried all of them.
Disabling Spee
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:07:05PM +0200, Martin Skøtt wrote:
> Disabling SpeedStep is a workaround, but it's not acceptible for me as a
> private laptop buyer. What is the problem with Linux and SpeedStep? Does it
> affect all machines (judgeing from this list, no) and what is that happen? In
In the depths of that dark day Tue Oct 23, the words of Martin Sk?tt were the
beacon:
> OK, we are now a couple of people here on the list who are struggling with
> random crashes of our laptops. The standard solution is to disable SpeedStep
> in the BIOS. Until now this haven't helped on my mach
Martin Skøtt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> OK, we are now a couple of people here on the list who are struggling with
> random crashes of our laptops. The standard solution is to disable SpeedStep
> in the BIOS. Until now this haven't helped on my machine, but I have many
> SpeedStep settings and I
I have a Dell Lattitude CPi (J series I think) with a 750Mhz Speedstep
CPU. I'm running kernel 2.2.19 and having no problems whatsoever. I
set the BIOS Speedstep setting to "Maximum Performance", so that it
runs at one speed all the time.
Hope this helps,
jc
In the depths of that dark day Tue Oct 23, the words of Andy Toenz were the
beacon:
> On Tuesday, 23. October 2001 15.19, Andy Bastien wrote:
> > > I don't have a switch "like" speedstep in my BIOS (Phoenix 4.0)
> >
> > Somewhere in the CMOS settings there should be a speedstep setting.
> > How ex
For what it's worth, I've a Dell Inspiron 7000 running 2.2.19
and SpeedStep seems to work fine. Well, in so far as when I plug the
machine in /proc/whatever says 700MHz and when I unplug the box it's
reported as 550. I've always assumed that this meant that it worked,
though I've never t
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 10:03:19AM -0400, Norman Walsh wrote:
> Well, I am disappointed to discover that my new Tecra 8200 has a wonky
> winmodem. (I had been holding out some hope that it would be a Lucent
> winmodem and I'd be able to get drivers for it.)
>
> Does the following output from lspc
Clayton Carter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> For what it's worth, I've a Dell Inspiron 7000 running 2.2.19
> and SpeedStep seems to work fine. Well, in so far as when I plug the
> machine in /proc/whatever says 700MHz and when I unplug the box it's
> reported as 550. I've always assumed tha
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:22:56PM +0100, Alexander Clouter wrote:
> erm a small thing to mention. Speedstep = bollocks (in a word). The reason
> it came about was because macrocroft refused to create a patch that called
> the cpu cooling instruction (HLT) when the machine was idle. This ment
I've got a USB camera working, but only on root.
I get the error Couldn't open device /dev/usb/dc2xx
But root can...
Setting on /dev/usb and /dev/usb/dc2xx are all '666'
Are you using devfs ???
I had to modify /etc/devfs/perms (or something like that) to get a user
to access the serial ports via minicom.
Cheers,
Brendan Simon.
Tom Allison wrote:
I've got a USB camera working, but only on root.
I get the error Couldn't open device /dev/usb/dc2xx
But root
Brendan J Simon wrote:
Are you using devfs ???
I had to modify /etc/devfs/perms (or something like that) to get a user
to access the serial ports via minicom.
Cheers,
Brendan Simon.
Tom Allison wrote:
I've got a USB camera working, but only on root.
I get the error Couldn't open device
Chris Halls wrote:
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:48:55AM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
I have attached a dump of the syslog from 'irda start' and it's working!
I'm so happy!
Well done!
I have one question though -- my baud rate is reported at 9600.
For a palm pilot Vx, can I turn this up? How Hi
Did you have to download and install a separate pcmcia package as well?
What did you download and from where, please?
I am currently seeing Cardbus Services handle my 3Com 3c589 nic (under
Progeny and kernel 2.2.18). I am not clear as to what handles my nic under
Unstable and kernel 2.4.12 (whic
you can do pcmcia support under 2.4.x in two ways:
installing the pcmcia packages (more stable, but maybe less feature-rich, and
somewhat more complex to setup).
Compiling pcmcia support into the new 2.4.x kernel, however, note that you'll
still need the pcmcia-cs package installed for full pcmc
Glen,
Thank you for your remarks.
I have read so many online documents about kernels and upgrades
and patches etc. that my eyes and head hurt! I have killed entire
forests with all that I have printed out to read again and mark up and
try.
At this point I could use some very simple ins
Installation of Debian 2.2r3 on a Dell Latitude C810 hangs arfter inital
reboot and Debian is trying to load the pc card bus. Any idea's?
On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, eDoc wrote:
>
>From whence do I also download pcmcia-cs to match kernel
> 2.4.12 and Unstable? (I looked around and the only site http
> site I found would not respond.)
http://pcmcia-cs.sourceforge.net/ - i keep mine in /usr/src.
>What are the steps I should follow,
Hi Doc.
I'll let you know what I did. YMMV.
install the pcmcia-cs packages (you probably already have this. As root, do
'which cardctl' and 'which cardmgr'.
download kernel source; untar into /usr/src/linux (rename the
kernel-source-2.4.x directory to linux)
make menuconfig
enable pcmcia supp
On Mon, Oct 22, 2001 at 02:36:50PM +0200, Wolfgang Fuschlberger wrote:
> On Mon, 22 Oct 2001, Michael Hothorn wrote:
>
> cp /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwertz/de-latin1-nodeadkeys.kmap.gz
> /etc/console/boottime.kmap.gz
>
> should help
Or, use the debconf GUI:
# dpkg-reconfigure console-common
Ch
Tom Allison wrote:
> Chris Halls wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Oct 22, 2001 at 07:02:07AM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
>>
>>> I'll start looking toward 2.4.12 to see if that is better behaved.
>>> At least I have an idea what to look for!
>>>
>> 2.4.12 works great with IrDA in FIR mode on my T20.
>> Chris
Tom Allison wrote:
> Um... I've been working on this irda stuff for a while and figured out
> one thing that I did a while back...
>
> I think I deleted /dev/irda.
> I can't find the mknod major/minor setting to recreate it.
>
> Can anyone look on theirs or send me a link?
>
>
UPDATE
linux
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:48:55AM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
> I have attached a dump of the syslog from 'irda start' and it's working!
> I'm so happy!
Well done!
>
> I have one question though -- my baud rate is reported at 9600.
> For a palm pilot Vx, can I turn this up? How High?
Are you sure
Has anyone configure XF86Config-4
for supporting an external monitor.
I'm running woody in a Toshiba satellite 1800/S253
and the Xserver is Xfree86 4
thanx
talueguito
raul
--
Fight to the Light. || Fight to the Li
Hi!
I need help, with compiling kernel module for following PCMCIA card:
Planet Realtek ENW-3504FC. I am using Debian 2.2r0 Potato and kernel 2.4.
I've already downloaded source files and precompiled modules from
their site, but insmod says, that the module was compiled against kernel
In the depths of that dark day Tue Oct 23, the words of Andy Toenz were the beacon:
> On Monday, 22. October 2001 21.15, Andy Bastien wrote:
> > In the depths of that dark day Mon Oct 22, the words of Andy Toenz were the
> beacon:
> > > Hi there,
> > >
> > > i have a problem with my HP Omnibook X
Well, I am disappointed to discover that my new Tecra 8200 has a wonky
winmodem. (I had been holding out some hope that it would be a Lucent
winmodem and I'd be able to get drivers for it.)
Does the following output from lspci tell anyone anything? Does
anyone know of a driver for the thing in
On Tuesday, 23. October 2001 15.19, Andy Bastien wrote:
> > I don't have a switch "like" speedstep in my BIOS (Phoenix 4.0)
>
> Somewhere in the CMOS settings there should be a speedstep setting.
> How exactly you get to it varies among laptops, so I can't tell you
> exactly where it is, but if yo
OK, we are now a couple of people here on the list who are struggling with
random crashes of our laptops. The standard solution is to disable SpeedStep
in the BIOS. Until now this haven't helped on my machine, but I have many
SpeedStep settings and I still haven't tried all of them.
Disabling Spe
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:07:05PM +0200, Martin Skøtt wrote:
> Disabling SpeedStep is a workaround, but it's not acceptible for me as a
> private laptop buyer. What is the problem with Linux and SpeedStep? Does it
> affect all machines (judgeing from this list, no) and what is that happen? In
In the depths of that dark day Tue Oct 23, the words of Martin Sk?tt were the beacon:
> OK, we are now a couple of people here on the list who are struggling with
> random crashes of our laptops. The standard solution is to disable SpeedStep
> in the BIOS. Until now this haven't helped on my mach
Martin Skøtt [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
>
> OK, we are now a couple of people here on the list who are struggling with
> random crashes of our laptops. The standard solution is to disable SpeedStep
> in the BIOS. Until now this haven't helped on my machine, but I have many
> SpeedStep settings an
I have a Dell Lattitude CPi (J series I think) with a 750Mhz Speedstep
CPU. I'm running kernel 2.2.19 and having no problems whatsoever. I
set the BIOS Speedstep setting to "Maximum Performance", so that it
runs at one speed all the time.
Hope this helps,
jc
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMA
In the depths of that dark day Tue Oct 23, the words of Andy Toenz were the beacon:
> On Tuesday, 23. October 2001 15.19, Andy Bastien wrote:
> > > I don't have a switch "like" speedstep in my BIOS (Phoenix 4.0)
> >
> > Somewhere in the CMOS settings there should be a speedstep setting.
> > How ex
For what it's worth, I've a Dell Inspiron 7000 running 2.2.19
and SpeedStep seems to work fine. Well, in so far as when I plug the
machine in /proc/whatever says 700MHz and when I unplug the box it's
reported as 550. I've always assumed that this meant that it worked,
though I've never
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 10:03:19AM -0400, Norman Walsh wrote:
> Well, I am disappointed to discover that my new Tecra 8200 has a wonky
> winmodem. (I had been holding out some hope that it would be a Lucent
> winmodem and I'd be able to get drivers for it.)
>
> Does the following output from lsp
Clayton Carter [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
>
> For what it's worth, I've a Dell Inspiron 7000 running 2.2.19
> and SpeedStep seems to work fine. Well, in so far as when I plug the
> machine in /proc/whatever says 700MHz and when I unplug the box it's
> reported as 550. I've always assumed
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:22:56PM +0100, Alexander Clouter wrote:
> erm a small thing to mention. Speedstep = bollocks (in a word). The reason
> it came about was because macrocroft refused to create a patch that called
> the cpu cooling instruction (HLT) when the machine was idle. This ment
I've got a USB camera working, but only on root.
I get the error Couldn't open device /dev/usb/dc2xx
But root can...
Setting on /dev/usb and /dev/usb/dc2xx are all '666'
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Are you using devfs ???
I had to modify /etc/devfs/perms (or something like that) to get a user
to access the serial ports via minicom.
Cheers,
Brendan Simon.
Tom Allison wrote:
> I've got a USB camera working, but only on root.
>
> I get the error Couldn't open device /dev/usb/dc2xx
> But
Brendan J Simon wrote:
>
> Are you using devfs ???
> I had to modify /etc/devfs/perms (or something like that) to get a user
> to access the serial ports via minicom.
>
> Cheers,
> Brendan Simon.
>
>
>
> Tom Allison wrote:
>
>> I've got a USB camera working, but only on root.
>>
>> I get t
Chris Halls wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 05:48:55AM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
>
>>I have attached a dump of the syslog from 'irda start' and it's working!
>>I'm so happy!
>>
> Well done!
>
>>I have one question though -- my baud rate is reported at 9600.
>>For a palm pilot Vx, can I turn th
Installation of Debian 2.2r3 on a Dell Latitude C810 hangs arfter inital
reboot and Debian is trying to load the pc card bus. Any idea's?
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, eDoc wrote:
[snip]
>> # ln -s linux-whatever linux
^^
[snip]
>> # cd linux
>
> Uh Oh!
>
> (I think you meant "cd pcmcia" because I can see something
> called "linux" in /usr/src/ trying to "cd" there gets only an error.)
there should be somet
you can do pcmcia support under 2.4.x in two ways:
installing the pcmcia packages (more stable, but maybe less feature-rich, and somewhat
more complex to setup).
Compiling pcmcia support into the new 2.4.x kernel, however, note that you'll still
need the pcmcia-cs package installed for full pcm
Glen,
Thank you for your remarks.
I have read so many online documents about kernels and upgrades
and patches etc. that my eyes and head hurt! I have killed entire
forests with all that I have printed out to read again and mark up and
try.
At this point I could use some very simple in
On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, eDoc wrote:
>
>From whence do I also download pcmcia-cs to match kernel
> 2.4.12 and Unstable? (I looked around and the only site http
> site I found would not respond.)
http://pcmcia-cs.sourceforge.net/ - i keep mine in /usr/src.
>What are the steps I should follow
Did you have to download and install a separate pcmcia package as well?
What did you download and from where, please?
I am currently seeing Cardbus Services handle my 3Com 3c589 nic (under
Progeny and kernel 2.2.18). I am not clear as to what handles my nic under
Unstable and kernel 2.4.12 (whi
I have the following and am about to reboot ... pray! :-)
Progeny update/upgrade to Unstable:
Steps:
Uncommented only unstable in sources.list
apt-get update
dpkg --purge --force-depends libfreetype6
apt-get -f dist-upgrade
(got an error on gdm)
Ran "apt-get -f dist-upgrade" again.
(addit
Hi Doc.
I'll let you know what I did. YMMV.
install the pcmcia-cs packages (you probably already have this. As root, do 'which
cardctl' and 'which cardmgr'.
download kernel source; untar into /usr/src/linux (rename the kernel-source-2.4.x
directory to linux)
make menuconfig
enable pcmcia sup
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