Or buy Adaptec, as I did, only to find out that it is so high quality
that they don't feel the need to tell anybody how to write drivers for
it, so Linux supports half of Adaptec's stuff, and the other half is
hit and miss.  Or buy Matrox, and run into the same problem.  

On Thu, 2 Jul 1998 17:54:41 GMT, Andrew Comech
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>>Perhaps the real problem is the people who purchase marginal hardware
>>in the name of "cost savings" and then expect the world to recognize
>>their ill-chosen no-name cost-cutting hardware?
>...
>>I stick to well-known names and mainstream models.  Adaptec.  Matrox.
>>USR.  Creative Labs.  Intel.  Plextor.  Sony. 
>
>Certainly this is nothing new to others, but again:
>USR's "mainstream" winmodems mislead people quite well (according to
>this newsgroup), while cost more than fair almost-no-name ones, and
>I do not see a reason not to save hundreds of dollars choosing
>K6 against Intel's stuff. 
>Also, according to my audio experience, premium paid for Sony is
>not worth it.
>
>Repeating what Richard wrote,
>but now referring to the mainstream:
>>Not magic touch -- common sense!
>a.
>


-- 
  PLEASE read the Red Hat FAQ, Tips, Errata and the MAILING LIST ARCHIVES!
http://www.redhat.com/RedHat-FAQ /RedHat-Errata /RedHat-Tips /mailing-lists
         To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with 
                       "unsubscribe" as the Subject.

Reply via email to