> > in effigy. They won't blame Red Hat. After all, it was my > > decision to upgrade to 7.3. Not Red Hat's. > > Glen, could I interest you in apt-rpm ?? It's a rather sweet > package for your RH boxes.
No. Downloading the rpms isn't the problem. The constant upgrades are. I need a stable operating system that allows me to upgrade individual packages instead of requiring that I upgrade the whole box. Red Hat clearly doesn't meet that requirement. Red Hat's problem is that they've gone commercial. In order to remain financially viable they now *have* to regularly put out upgrades. I have all the new 7.3 rpms on the hard drive. Some installed. Some won't. So have have a part 7.2, part 7.3 box with a lot of broken programs. > Ouch! But, you DO have help. :--) My only request is "Purdy > Please!, no html mail" If I'm sending out html mail it's not by intent. > lspci shows that yes, you DO have the sound chip on your motherboard > and 'accessable". That's all. :--) So, let's see. Can you look at > "dmesg | less" and see if you can see what it says about the > initialization? THIS is where you'll see if the chipset was actually > activated. I see no reference in dmesg to anything audio, nor to IRQ 11, which is where lspci -vv says audio is located. Glen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]