RE: usb ohci camera on ben8

2003-04-11 Thread Craig P Steffen
Quoting Mark Barr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > No dice. > > It pestered me to specify a filesystem type. I guessed and tried a > few, > including "auto"(what would the proper fs be?) Yeah, I vaguely remember that "-t auto" didn't work. My laptop has file system type "msdos" in its type field for the

Re: usb ohci camera on ben8

2003-04-10 Thread Craig P Steffen
Quoting Mark Barr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > lsmod shows that the usb-storage module has been loaded and looks good. > So > what else do i have to do? Where has it mounted? Or has it? If it works the same as mine, when the usb-storage module loads, it creates a hook to the camera's file system as a S

Re: Debian comes up with clock 14 hours off

2003-02-19 Thread Craig P Steffen
Quoting [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > > The story so far; in Debian on my iBook, the clock is 14 hours > ahead > > > (it's set correctly in Mac OS X). The problem is consistent and > > > reproducible. [...] > > Do you have multiple Linux partitions? In particular, is /usr on a > > separate partition?

Re: Debian comes up with clock 14 hours off

2003-02-18 Thread Craig P Steffen
The story so far; in Debian on my iBook, the clock is 14 hours ahead (it's set correctly in Mac OS X). The problem is consistent and reproducible. If I set the Linux kernel clock (using the "date" command) to the correct time, then boot from there to Mac OS X, the clock there is 14 hours behind

Re: What method to get kernel source?

2003-02-17 Thread Craig P Steffen
Quoting "Nathan S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > It seems like there are multiple ways of getting kernel source. I'm > new to Debian/Linux, so I don't know which method would be best for > me, > so I would like to ask for some pointers before I have to make the 24 > MB download. > I have a beige g3/233

Debian comes up with clock 14 hours off

2003-02-17 Thread Craig P Steffen
I just installed new-powerpc Debian (testing) on my Apple iBook. I dual-boot with Mac OS X. I am running the stock kernel that came with the new-powermac installation, 2.4.18-newpmac. When Linux boots, it sets is time to 14 hours ahead of what it should be, whereas Mac OS X has the correct idea