On 08/16/04 18:51, Bradley Pursley wrote:
I will ask this again (for the 3rd time) and then am going to drop it
assuming that no one knows the answer. Does anyone know what has happened
to all of the older versions like Potato or Slink, previous to Woody, of
Debian? The archive.debian.
Abrasive wrote:
Thanks for all the replies I got. They were all great answers, and at
the very least, helping
me on my way to learning Debian. I found that booting with the 5th CD
in the set was the
easiest way to start out with the 2.4.x kernel.
But now, out of sheer morbid curiosity, I still
In order to boot the 2.4 kernel you will need
the 5th cd from the woody set to boot with.
The NIC is an Intel Pro 100 S Desktop Adapter.
One of my previous emails was answered by someone that stated the 2.4.x
kernel would recognize
the NIC. and the display adapter which is an Intel 845G -
At
The NIC is an Intel Pro 100 S Desktop Adapter.
One of my previous emails was answered by someone that stated the 2.4.x
kernel would recognize
the NIC. and the display adapter which is an Intel 845G -
At 09:24 PM 7/1/2003 -0500, Jay Latham wrote:
On Tuesday 01 July 2003 15:01, Abrasive wrote:
>
Thanks for all the replies I got. They were all great answers, and
at the very least, helping
me on my way to learning Debian. I found that booting with the 5th
CD in the set was the
easiest way to start out with the 2.4.x kernel.
But now, out of sheer morbid curiosity, I still want to upgrade
>Thus spoke Abrasive:
>
>"I just installed a fresh copy of Debian 3.0r1, and in order for my
>hardware to work, I need
>>to upgrade the kernel to a 2.4.x version."
>
>
>
>Well, in addition to being able to boot the 1st of the 7 installation cds
>to get a base install, you can also boot using the
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Tuesday 01 July 2003 12:01 pm, Abrasive wrote:
> I've had some trouble posting to this group, so I'm trying again with a
> different mail client.
> Here's my problem. I don't know what I'm doing... But about my other
> problems...
> I just install
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 01:30:14 +0200, Abrasive wrote:
> work. Although I've been told that the newer kernel supports that card.
> SO, which files do I need to download(kernel image, package, etc) that I
> can put on a CD
> and copy to the Debian machine. And then what do I do with those files?
> T
Hi,
* Abrasive <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [030702 11:00]:
> I've had some trouble posting to this group, so I'm trying again with a
> different mail client.
Please see my reply to your previous email (subject: "Newbie Question").
Here is another tip on posting to this list: Use subject lines that
p
On Tue, 01 Jul 2003 15:01:44 -0500
Abrasive <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've had some trouble posting to this group, so I'm trying again with a
> different mail client.
> Here's my problem. I don't know what I'm doing... But about my other
> problems...
> I just installed a fresh copy of Debi
Rather than muck around downloading an iso image whatever if you don't
have an Internet connection why not buy debian 3 with a 2.4 kernel.
They're available here in Aus for $20 approx. or USD12.
That way, unless you've got a really 'off the wall' nic it'll discover
it, and most of your other hardw
On Tuesday 01 July 2003 15:01, Abrasive wrote:
> I've had some trouble posting to this group, so I'm trying again with a
> different mail client.
> Here's my problem. I don't know what I'm doing... But about my other
> problems...
> I just installed a fresh copy of Debian 3.0r1, and in order for
Thus spoke Abrasive:
"I just installed a fresh copy of Debian 3.0r1, and in order for my
hardware to work, I need
to upgrade the kernel to a 2.4.x version."
Well, in addition to being able to boot the 1st of the 7 installation cds
to get a base install, you can also boot using the 5th cd in
In linux.debian.user, you wrote:
> [Sorry if this is the 2nd or 3rd attempt at posting. My Mac system here
> is acting wierd, and I'm not sure if the email went or not.]
>
> I have Debian/Woody with KDE login, the kind that shows users' heads,
> and allows options to be selected such as "console l
on Tue, Jun 18, 2002, Colin Watson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2002 at 01:08:30AM -0700, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> > - Run "dpkg --reconfigure xserver-xfree86" to re-run your X11
> > configuration.
>
> For 'dpkg --reconfigure' read 'dpkg-reconfigure' (dpkg doesn't have a
> -
On Tue, Jun 18, 2002 at 01:08:30AM -0700, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> - Run "dpkg --reconfigure xserver-xfree86" to re-run your X11
> configuration.
For 'dpkg --reconfigure' read 'dpkg-reconfigure' (dpkg doesn't have a
--reconfigure option; dpkg-reconfigure is a separate program).
--
Colin W
on Tue, Jun 18, 2002, Mike Rudmin ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> [Sorry if this is the 2nd or 3rd attempt at posting. My Mac system here
> is acting wierd, and I'm not sure if the email went or not.]
3rd.
> I have Debian/Woody with KDE login, the kind that shows users' heads,
> and allows options
17 matches
Mail list logo