On Thu, May 08, 2008 at 12:59:59PM +0300, Shlomi Fish wrote:
> On Thursday 08 May 2008, Moshe Gorohovsky wrote:
> > Hi linux-il,
> >
> > Hag Sameah!
> >
> > I recently set up a linux PC with Intel Core2 Duo CPU.
> >
> > I had started the PC up from a knoppix v5.3.1 DVD.
> > Linux kernel on this DVD
Hi,
Thank you for the answers.
Moshe.
Michael Tewner wrote:
> A recent version of the Linux kernel will see two CPU's but know
> they're on the same physical processor. This is important especially
> when you have multiple physical multi-core processors.
>
> Multiple cores share text segments-
A recent version of the Linux kernel will see two CPU's but know
they're on the same physical processor. This is important especially
when you have multiple physical multi-core processors.
Multiple cores share text segments- the kernel will try to keep
multiple threads of the same process on the s
On Thursday 08 May 2008, Moshe Gorohovsky wrote:
> Hi linux-il,
>
> Hag Sameah!
>
> I recently set up a linux PC with Intel Core2 Duo CPU.
>
> I had started the PC up from a knoppix v5.3.1 DVD.
> Linux kernel on this DVD uses graphical framebuffer console and
> shows two penguin images on start-up.
Hi,
On Thu, May 8, 2008 at 11:49 AM, Moshe Gorohovsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi linux-il,
>
> Hag Sameah!
>
> I recently set up a linux PC with Intel Core2 Duo CPU.
>
> I had started the PC up from a knoppix v5.3.1 DVD.
> Linux kernel on this DVD uses graphical framebuffer console and
>
Hi linux-il,
Hag Sameah!
I recently set up a linux PC with Intel Core2 Duo CPU.
I had started the PC up from a knoppix v5.3.1 DVD.
Linux kernel on this DVD uses graphical framebuffer console and
shows two penguin images on start-up. My previous machine
showed a single penguin image. It was AMD K