On Sun, 10 Jan 1999 23:58:10 +0100
Michele Bini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Can you detect your card using pnpdump?
No, it wasn't detected by pnpdump.
I actually worked it out eventually. I basically made a dos boot disk
with a ramdisk on it using OpenDOS (did a 'format /s' from an OpenDOS
ima
On Thu, Jan 07, 1999 at 05:28:28AM -0800, Kenneth Scharf wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> This one has got me beat, and I'm hoping someone in debian-land might be
> able to help me out.
>
> I got a vibra 16 card (soundblaster) from a friend, but it didn't come
> with any driver disks or anything like that.
There is a secondary/tertiary problem: the CD I got with my vibra16 won't
install in strict dos, but requires win3x to install. The second problem
is that the vibra16 configuration is dependent on two drivers: firstly the
config.sys device driver CTCM, then the autoexec.bat driver CTCU. Then
you
> This card isn't actually a PnP card, and is not seen by pnpdump. It's a
> jumperless card, so it doesn't have it's resources dictated by the OS,
> but by a configuration program.
>
> I'd perfer not to mess up my delicatly balanced windoze system by adding
> another card, then taking it out and h
On Wed, 6 Jan 1999 23:39:54 -0600 (EST)
Stephen Pitts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What type of BIOS do you have? my PCI PnP bios auto-configured the
> card and I used win98 to find out the irq and dma. There is a package
> called isapnptools that has similar functions. Get it, read the docs,
> as
On 7 Jan, Damon Muller wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> This one has got me beat, and I'm hoping someone in debian-land might be
> able to help me out.
>
> I got a vibra 16 card (soundblaster) from a friend, but it didn't come
> with any driver disks or anything like that. Unfortunately it is a
> jumperle
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