From: stheg olloydson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Now as to the "need" to change the logo, to quote the announcement,
> "This character sometimes treated with misinterpreted in the
> religious and cultural context." Over the years, the only complaints I
> have ever heard have come from America's
From: Anthony Atkielski [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Because FreeBSD is a server, not a desktop.
Agree and disagree. While FreeBSD is well suited for the server, it's also
well suited for the desktop. That doesn't mean that we should be stressing
the desktop to those shopping for servers, instead
On Wednesday 07 April 2004 02:21 pm, Tadimeti Keshav wrote:
> hi all.
> I added a 2 GB linux disk as a slave and installed
> Mandrake Linux with LILO on the root partition of
> linux.
So far this is correct. LILO needs to be on the *root* partition.
> I am trying configure Boot Easy to boot linux
On Wednesday 07 April 2004 02:56 pm, Jerry McAllister wrote:
> If I understand what you are asking - FreeBSD on disk0 and Linux
> on disk1, then you need to install an MBR and a standard book
> sector on disk 0.
But the "standard" boot sector will not boot to disk 1. Quoting from the
Handbook:
On Thursday 08 April 2004 04:40 pm, Gary W. Swearingen wrote:
> > So far this is correct. LILO needs to be on the *root* partition.
>
> No, it doesn't. It only needs to be on some boot record: the MBR or
> the BR of one of the 4 primary partitions. It was once common to put
> it on a small /boot
I just upgraded to 5.1-RELEASE last night. I have a Jungsoft Nexdisk USB
memory stick that is being successfully recognized. Since I want the
memory stick to be usable by users of group operator, I need the
/dev/da0s1 device to be mode 0664. Then they can mount the device on
one of their own di
On Wednesday 25 June 2003 11:48 am, Johnson David wrote:
> Is there an accepted means of adding a ruleset using the new rc
> system? Is there another way of doing what I want? I understand that
> rc.devfs is deprecated, so I don't really want to use it unless I
> have to.
Search
On Tuesday 02 March 2004 04:28 pm, Tadimeti Keshav wrote:
> I added to my kernel config file:
> device pca
> (this was mentioned in the NOTES file)
Typically a PC speaker is not an audio device in the normal sense of the
term. It's there just to make beeps, and not music. It's not going to
do w
On Wednesday 03 March 2004 10:12 pm, Tadimeti Keshav wrote:
> Hi
> thanks for the answer, but when I had Windows
> installed, the speaker did work, I mean I was able to
> hear music, in addition to the beeps.
I may be confused as to what speaker you are talking about. My
assumption was that you w