On Nov 21 2000, Jean-Marc Cadudal wrote:
Any advise, suggestion to go around this problem ?
Move the HD to another machine and install it there. Then move
it back to your 386. Experiment with slight variations of
this. Do make a boot disk when the install is done to boot
-
From: Martin Albert [mailto: ]
Sent: lundi 20 novembre 2000 19:08
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: 386 install
Btw. forget it. I saw a pentium/100 with 8MB RAM, and it was
unusable slow.
apt-get-installing a 20kb-package took 5 Minutes(!). After
upgrading to 24MB
Jean-Marc Cadudal [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I have an old 386 on which I'd like to install Debian 2.2.
HP Vectra RS/20
10 Mb RAM
100 Mb DISK
Floppy 1,4 Mb
Floppy 1,2 Mb
The only way I can install on this config is to use the
floppy method. I have then created a set of boot floppies
Hi folks,
On Tue, 21 Nov 2000, Bek Oberin wrote:
Daniel Migowski wrote:
On Montag, 20. November 2000 16:15, Jean-Marc Cadudal wrote:
I have an old 386 on which I'd like to install Debian 2.2.
HP Vectra RS/20
10 Mb RAM
100 Mb DISK
Floppy 1,4 Mb
Floppy 1,2 Mb
Btw. forget it.
On Tue, 21 Nov 2000, Daniel Reuter wrote:
uwm). If you have a network connection, you could run X over the network
and use the machine as terminal.
How can you do that?
I thought X server must run on the same machine where the display and
keyboard is, and you can run X programs on any other
Check out www.ltsp.org for the Linux Terminal Server
Project
Monte
--- Pap Tibor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 21 Nov 2000, Daniel Reuter wrote:
uwm). If you have a network connection, you could run X
over the network
and use the machine as terminal.
How can you do that?
I thought
On Tuesday 21 November 2000 13:32, Pap Tibor wrote:
On Tue, 21 Nov 2000, Daniel Reuter wrote:
uwm). If you have a network connection, you could run X over the network
and use the machine as terminal.
How can you do that?
I thought X server must run on the same machine where the display and
I have an old 386 on which I'd like to install Debian 2.2.
HP Vectra RS/20
10 Mb RAM
100 Mb DISK
Floppy 1,4 Mb
Floppy 1,2 Mb
The only way I can install on this config is to use the
floppy method. I have then created a set of boot floppies
with the idepci kernel flavour.
The boot process fails
On Montag, 20. November 2000 16:15, Jean-Marc Cadudal wrote:
I have an old 386 on which I'd like to install Debian 2.2.
HP Vectra RS/20
10 Mb RAM
100 Mb DISK
Floppy 1,4 Mb
Floppy 1,2 Mb
Btw. forget it. I saw a pentium/100 with 8MB RAM, and it was unusable slow.
apt-get-installing a
Daniel Migowski wrote:
On Montag, 20. November 2000 16:15, Jean-Marc Cadudal wrote:
I have an old 386 on which I'd like to install Debian 2.2.
HP Vectra RS/20
10 Mb RAM
100 Mb DISK
Floppy 1,4 Mb
Floppy 1,2 Mb
Btw. forget it. I saw a pentium/100 with 8MB RAM, and it was unusable slow.
On Monday 20 November 2000 18:47, Bek Oberin wrote:
Daniel Migowski wrote:
On Montag, 20. November 2000 16:15, Jean-Marc Cadudal wrote:
I have an old 386 on which I'd like to install Debian 2.2.
HP Vectra RS/20
10 Mb RAM
100 Mb DISK
Floppy 1,4 Mb
Floppy 1,2 Mb
Btw.
Btw. forget it. I saw a pentium/100 with 8MB RAM, and it was unusable slow.
apt-get-installing a 20kb-package took 5 Minutes(!). After upgrading to 24MB
RAM (didn't check 16MB), it was a cool server, even able to run small
php3-scripts in a fast manner.
As always it only depends on what
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