On Sun, Dec 09, 2001 at 01:01:56AM -0500, Colin Walters wrote:
> Chris Tillman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Sounds like we should advise people to keep those partitions around
> > rather than using i to initialize the partition table.
>
> Isn't there a way to prevent MacOS from asking questi
Chris Tillman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Sounds like we should advise people to keep those partitions around
> rather than using i to initialize the partition table.
Isn't there a way to prevent MacOS from asking questions like that? I
would suggest to download the source code and fix the bug
* Jeffrey W. Baker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [011208 16:24]:
> On Sat, 2001-12-08 at 13:16, James Tyson wrote:
> >
> > Hi all.
> >
> > I finally picked up the OS 10.1 upgrade cd - if I install this is it going
> > to adversely affect the installed linux partit
On Sat, Dec 08, 2001 at 04:40:09PM -0500, Jack Howarth wrote:
> James,
> The amount of grief you'll get from upgrading MacOS X 10.0.4 to 10.1
> depends on where your linux partitions are located. If you are sharing
> a drive already between linux and MacOS X you'll be okay. However if like
> m
James,
The amount of grief you'll get from upgrading MacOS X 10.0.4 to 10.1
depends on where your linux partitions are located. If you are sharing
a drive already between linux and MacOS X you'll be okay. However if like
me you have a separate linux only drive, 10.1 will cause you major grief.
On Sat, 2001-12-08 at 13:16, James Tyson wrote:
>
> Hi all.
>
> I finally picked up the OS 10.1 upgrade cd - if I install this is it going
> to adversely affect the installed linux partitions?
You'll need to manually boot from open firmware after you install OS X.
-jwb
Hi all.
I finally picked up the OS 10.1 upgrade cd - if I install this is it going
to adversely affect the installed linux partitions?
Cheers.
James Tyson ---
Samizdat New Media Solutions
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