On Sun, Oct 27, 2002 at 02:36:42AM +0200, Carmen Alfaro wrote:
> I'm trying to find a pcmcia network card that will be fully supported
> under linux, Debian woody 3.0r0 bf24 specifically, but after several
> hours spent browsing around the net I haven't found any. I've tried the
> 3Com site, but
On 27 Oct 2002 at 2:36am, Carmen Alfaro wrote:
:Hi all,
: I'm trying to find a pcmcia network card that will be fully supported
:under linux, Debian woody 3.0r0 bf24 specifically, but after several
:hours spent browsing around the net I haven't found any. I've tried the
:3Com site, but for almost
This one time, at band camp, Carmen Alfaro said:
> Hi all, I'm trying to find a pcmcia network card that will be fully
> supported under linux, Debian woody 3.0r0 bf24 specifically, but after
> several hours spent browsing around the net I haven't found any. I've
> tried the 3Com site, but for almo
On Fri, Oct 25, 2002 at 04:25:22PM -0700, EasyStreet wrote:
> I am running Debian 3 on a laptop PC. A Dell
> Latitude XPi, Pentium 133.
>
> This laptop does not have a network card or a CD
> drive.
>
> I have both of these devices on PCMCIA cards.
>
> I think the CD-ROM drive works, but I can't
On Fri, Oct 18, 2002 at 07:33:18PM -0700, nate wrote..
> Kevin Coyner said:
>
> > I'm trying to figure out what the line about autonegotiation failed
> > means, and whether that will point me towards my problem.
>
> While in my experience it is EXTREMELY rare for autonegotiation
> to fail i
On Wed, Oct 16, 2002 at 07:26:01AM -0600, Mark Zimmerman wrote..
> On Wed, Oct 16, 2002 at 08:12:31AM -0400, Kevin Coyner wrote:
> >
> > I'm installing stable onto an IBM 560X from a FD boot and then FTP.
> >
> > Most of the install has been uneventful, but getting the PCMCIA to work
> > (a
On Wed, Oct 16, 2002 at 12:18:28PM -0400, Kevin Coyner wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 16, 2002 at 07:26:01AM -0600, Mark Zimmerman wrote..
> > >
> > > I'm using a Xircom CreditCard CEM56-100 (ether 10/100 + modem56) as my
> > > pcmcia card.
> >
> > Except for the card (I have a 3com with etherne
On Wed, Oct 16, 2002 at 07:26:01AM -0600, Mark Zimmerman wrote..
> >
> > I'm using a Xircom CreditCard CEM56-100 (ether 10/100 + modem56) as my
> > pcmcia card.
>
> Except for the card (I have a 3com with ethernet only) my setup is the
> same as yours. I never specified any options and I n
On Wed, Oct 16, 2002 at 08:12:31AM -0400, Kevin Coyner wrote:
>
> I'm installing stable onto an IBM 560X from a FD boot and then FTP.
>
> Most of the install has been uneventful, but getting the PCMCIA to work
> (and then networking so as to FTP install) has been problematic.
>
> I'm using a Xi
Eric Richardson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi Andreas,
> You might want to try debian-laptop list. I always use the
> /etc/init.d/networking script or /etc/init.d/pcmcia to start and stop
> the cardbus. Did you try booting with the card in?
>
> Eric
Thanks. I already wrote to debian-laptop t
Hi Andreas,
You might want to try debian-laptop list. I always use the
/etc/init.d/networking script or /etc/init.d/pcmcia to start and stop
the cardbus. Did you try booting with the card in?
Eric
Andreas Goesele wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I already lost too much time trying to get PCMCIA work on my la
On Thu, Sep 26, 2002 at 10:52:52AM -0700, Lars Jensen wrote:
> Hi Andy,
>
> 1) What module is for this card listed when you do an lsmod as root?
>
> 2) Are you using the same kernel (2.4.18) with the kernel-pcmcia-modules?
>
>
> Thanks for your help,
> Lars.
Lars,
Firstly, please keep your p
On Wed, Sep 25, 2002 at 02:30:15PM -0400, Thomas R. Shemanske wrote:
> Try modprobe 3c59x
>
> From the kernel source help line:
>
> CONFIG_VORTEX:
>
> This option enables driver support for a large number of 10mbps and
> 10/100mbps EISA, PCI and PCMCIA 3Com network cards:
>
> "Vortex"(Fast
Lars Jensen wrote:
> I just upgraded my kernel, using the debian pre-compiled kernel image
> for kernel 2.4.18, I also installed the corresponding
> kernel-pcmcia-modules-2.4.18 package. The packages installed fine, but I
> can't get pcmcia to see my 3Com PC card. The card is a 10/100 LAN
> CardBu
Hi,
On Tue, Sep 17, 2002 at 03:06:57PM +, sven petterson wrote:
> Hello
>
> I have a "Vadem VG-469 rev 00 ISA-to-PCMCIA at port 0x3e2 ofs 0x00" board
> and i can't get it to work under 2.4.18.
>
> Under 2.2.20 both the i82365 and yenta_socket PCIC works and loads drivers
> for the cards i
Pat Colbeck wrote:
> Hi
>
> It seems that with 2.4.x kernels the way PCMCIA is handled has
> changed. I have managed to get my Xircom Realport card to work
> with the 2.4.18 kernel that comes with Woody after much loading
> and unloading of modules and starting and stopping of
> /etc/in
Pat Colbeck wrote:
> Hi
>
> It seems that with 2.4.x kernels the way PCMCIA is handled has changed. I have
> managed to get my Xircom Realport card to work with the 2.4.18 kernel that
> comes with Woody after much loading and unloading of modules and starting and
> stopping of /etc/init.d/pcmc
Thanks
I hadn't noticed pcmcia.conf had moved. I scanned the other docs you mentioned
yesterday but obviosley have not digested them properly :)
I will try again at the weekend when I have some more time to read them
properly.
Pat
On Thursday 05 September 2002 2:50 pm, Andre Berger wrote:
>
--xgyAXRrhYN0wYx8y
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Disposition: inline
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
* Pat Colbeck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2002-09-05 06:15 -0400:
> It seems that with 2.4.x kernels the way PCMCIA is handled has changed. I=
have=20
> managed to get
../kernel/drivers/wireless/{hermed,orinoco,orinoco_cs}.o worked.
Now I have routing issues but that's solvable.
~mark
- Original Message -
From: "Grant Edwards" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Jamin W . Collins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc:
Sent: Tuesday, May
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, @mailrelay.informatik.tu-muenchen.de:[EMAIL
PROTECTED] Mon May 13 23:10:03 2002 wrote:
> On Mon, 13 May 2002 14:03:32 -0700
> "Mark Lanett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> I've been trying to set up a desktop machine to act as a wireless router
>> and am having tro
"Mark" == Mark Lanett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Mark> I've been trying to set up a desktop machine to act as a
Mark> wireless router and am having trouble getting the wireless
Mark> card to work. This is an orinoco silver in a Lucent PCMCIA
Mark> adapter - I chose to go with
On Mon, 13 May 2002 14:03:32 -0700
"Mark Lanett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've been trying to set up a desktop machine to act as a wireless router
> and am having trouble getting the wireless card to work. This is an
> orinoco silver in a Lucent PCMCIA adapter - I chose to go with the name
> b
On Tue, Apr 23, 2002 at 10:48:48AM +1000, Tony Green wrote:
> I've got a couple of dual usb/fw external housings (one 5 1/4 and one 3
> 1/2). CD-RW and a 60GB drive in them and they work fantastic on both
> USB and Firewire.
Which enclosures are you using? I notice the maximum throughput of some
I don't have personal experience with any PCMCIA firewire adapters, but this
page may help you:
http://linux1394.sourceforge.net/hcl.php
Note that very likely what you want is a CardBus card, rather than a PCMCIA
card. Strictly speaking, PCMCIA is the ISA bus in a small form factor to fit in
On Tue, 2002-04-23 at 10:36, Mike Frisch wrote:
> I do not have anything to offer here, but am interested in hearing the
> results. The external Firewire hard disk is a no brainer (AFAIK), but
> the PCMCIA Firewire card may not be.
>
I've got a couple of dual usb/fw external housings (one 5 1/4
On Mon, Apr 22, 2002 at 08:25:40PM -0400, Norman Walsh wrote:
> Well, my laptop doesn't have a firewire port, but I suppose this would
> be a good excuse to buy a firewire PCMCIA card. Anyone have experience
> using a firewire PCMCIA card and an external hard disk?
I do not have anything to offer
On 15-Apr-2002 Deva Seetharam wrote:
> hi all,
> i am running debian kernel 2.4.17 on a ibm t22 laptop. i am trying to install
> pcmcia modules to use my wavelan/ethernet cards.
>
> when i do a make all, i get the following error message and it dies. could
> anyone pls help?
>
apt-get install p
On Sat, 2002-04-13 at 16:10, Matijs van Zuijlen wrote:
Hi
> On Sat, Apr 13, 2002 at 01:41:47PM +0200, Ernst-Magne Vindal wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I am running debian 2.2.20 sid on a laptop and I am haveing trouble with
> > the pcmcia card. It starts after the nettwork and couses the pc to boot
> >
On Sat, Apr 13, 2002 at 01:41:47PM +0200, Ernst-Magne Vindal wrote:
> Hi
>
> I am running debian 2.2.20 sid on a laptop and I am haveing trouble with
> the pcmcia card. It starts after the nettwork and couses the pc to boot
> without getting an address from dhcp.
> I need to run /etc/init.d/networ
Bob,
> For a number of other reasons I'd like to go to 2.4.10 ... any experience on
> the TR PCMCIA out there ??
>
> Than you. Bob Alexander
>
It all works fine using the token ring pcmcia drivers in the kernel.
The latest drivers are in fact better as they do away with the need
for the config.
Andreas von Heydwolff wrote:
Thanks a lot, Joey and Seneca! Already won an eBay auction for an older
3com pcmcia network card for 1 EUR (EURO) + pp.
Wow - "1 EUR" was 1 when I posted the message,
so I would not have had to write EURO myself.
Anyone know where the conversion from to EUR
ha
Thanks a lot, Joey and Seneca! Already won an eBay auction for an older
3com pcmcia network card for 1 EUR (EURO) + pp.
Cheers,
Andreas
on Tue, Feb 19, 2002, Vaughan, Curtis ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>
> I have installed 2.4.17 kernel and the pcmcia modules for that kernel.
>
> Unfortunately, the card is still not working. On the debian-users newsgroup
> some people noted that you need to have yenta_socket installed for 2.4.x
>
Andreas von Heydwolff wrote:
> Could I use the a card that I would buy today or have standards changed
> and I would have to look for a vintage pcmcia network and/or modem card?
You probably want to avoid cardbus cards, I think other pcmcia cards are
unchanged.
--
see shy jo
Andreas von Heydwolff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Just today I installed potato from floppies on a 486 SL 25 laptop
built
> in 1993. I have never used a pcmcia card in my life, don't own one and
> don't know anyone who has one. It looks as if the 486 can hold two
cards
> in one slot (or would it b
Osamu Aoki wrote:
In my case isa_pnp (or isa-pnp? I foregot.) module was needed for old
486 notebook.
Hello,
please excuse me for tuning in with a brief pcmcia question of my own:
Just today I installed potato from floppies on a 486 SL 25 laptop built
in 1993. I have never used a pcmcia car
In my case isa_pnp (or isa-pnp? I foregot.) module was needed for old
486 notebook.
On Tue, Feb 19, 2002 at 11:49:02AM -0800, Vaughan, Curtis wrote:
> I have installed 2.4.17 kernel and the pcmcia modules for that kernel.
>
> Unfortunately, the card is still not working. On the debian-users ne
I have installed 2.4.17 kernel and the pcmcia modules for that kernel.
Unfortunately, the card is still not working. On the debian-users newsgroup
some people noted that you need to have yenta_socket installed for 2.4.x
modules and i82365 for 2.2.x
On the other hand, some people wrote that by c
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 08:18:40PM +, Karl E. Jorgensen wrote:
| On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 11:26:36AM -0800, Vaughan, Curtis wrote:
| > Try
| > /etc/init.d/pcmcia start
| >
| > Here's what I get:
| > Starting PCMCIA services: modulesinsmod: a module named pcmcia_core already
| > exists
| > i
/ Michael Epting <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was heard to say:
| Well, I'm running an older 2.4 kernel on my ancient Toshiba laptop and I
| needed to change /etc/default/pcmcia from yenta_socket to i82365.
| Everything is back to fine now.
Curiously, this seems to have fixed the problem for me, too, even
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 08:18:40PM +, Karl E. Jorgensen wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 11:26:36AM -0800, Vaughan, Curtis wrote:
> > Here's what I get:
> > Starting PCMCIA services: modulesinsmod: a module named pcmcia_core already
> > exists
> > insmod:/lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/yenta_socket.
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 11:26:36AM -0800, Vaughan, Curtis wrote:
> Try
> /etc/init.d/pcmcia start
>
> Here's what I get:
> Starting PCMCIA services: modulesinsmod: a module named pcmcia_core already
> exists
> insmod:/lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/yenta_socket.o: No such file or directory
/ "Vaughan, Curtis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was heard to say:
| Here's what I get:
| Starting PCMCIA services: modulesinsmod: a module named pcmcia_core already
| exists
| insmod:/lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/yenta_socket.o: No such file or directory
| ds: no socket drivers loaded!
| /lib/modules/2.2.17/
Try
/etc/init.d/pcmcia start
Here's what I get:
Starting PCMCIA services: modulesinsmod: a module named pcmcia_core already
exists
insmod:/lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmcia/yenta_socket.o: No such file or directory
ds: no socket drivers loaded!
/lib/modules/2.2.17/pcmicia/ds.o: init_modules: Device o
On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 11:10:47AM -0800, Vaughan, Curtis wrote:
| Twice now, I have experimented with upgrading from potato to woody. Each
| time, however, I've experienced the exact same problem, which I can't seem
| to resolve.
|
| During the update you get a question basically like this:
|
|
On Thu, 31 Jan 2002, Thomas R. Shemanske wrote:
> You did not mention what version of boot-floppies you were using
>
> I did a network install with pcmcia using boot-floppies 3.0.17. Modules
> were fine.
I don't remember exactly, but it's no problem anymore, i installed a
basesystem from pota
You did not mention what version of boot-floppies you were using
I did a network install with pcmcia using boot-floppies 3.0.17. Modules
were fine.
In the initial install phase, the network was found, but not on reboot.
For me, this was fixed by adding the line DHCP="y" after the line saying
"Pieter De Troyer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm installing debian woody (r3.0) on a laptop. I want to do a
> network-install. The bootfloppies I 've got don't seem to get my network
> working right. I loaded (manually, because mdprobe didn't do it) the
> following modules:
>
> pcmcia_core
> i8
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Vittorio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>BUT.. I downloaded from D-Link support site a revised
>pcmcia-cs-3.1.15r3.tgz file in which is included the needed module for
>my pcmcia card: tulip_cb.c (in the documentation is written that it
>requires 2.0,2.2,2.3 kernels, no
Hi,
On Thu, Oct 25, 2001 at 08:00:15PM +0100, Tom Breza wrote:
> > Wow, Tom is right but kernel recompile is the more painful way. I have
> > gone through this pain of upgrading for my i486DX2 gateway.
> Why compiling kernel is painful
Point well taken. Yes "compiling" is fun :-)
What I m
Hi
> Wow, Tom is right but kernel recompile is the more painful way. I have
> gone through this pain of upgrading for my i486DX2 gateway.
Why compiling kernel is painful I belive he have relatively new laptop
with strong CPU a lot of ram, Hardware shoud not be a problem,
any way if u have s
Good job but I think there is a typo.
On Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 10:49:55PM -0500, Stephen E. Hargrove wrote:
> # tar xfvz linux-whatever.tar.gz
> # rm -rf linux
> # ln -s linux-whatever linux
> # tar xfvz pcmcia-cs-whatever.tar.gz
> # ln -s pcmcia-cs-whatever pcmcia
> # cd linux
> # rm -rf pcmcia
I should have checked it on real file :-)
Here is my correction:
On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 06:13:59PM -0700, Osamu Aoki wrote:
> Debian stock kernel comes with almost all concievable modules including
> PCMCIA. So all you have to do to get PCMCIA activated is to know exact
> module names to put in
Wow, Tom is right but kernel recompile is the more painful way. I have
gone through this pain of upgrading for my i486DX2 gateway.
Debian stock kernel comes with almost all concievable modules including
PCMCIA. So all you have to do to get PCMCIA activated is to know exact
module names to put in
Hi
1. Why u afraid to reboot ya laptop? You shoud leave old kernel *always*
if somthing goes wrong u can always boot in old configuration,
at the moment I got 3-4 diff kernels on my system.
2. if u try install 3Com 3c589 is supported in kernel, u can install it
like a module, (my one 2.4.12-ac5)
Hi Doc.
I'll let you know what I did. YMMV.
install the pcmcia-cs packages (you probably already have this. As root, do
'which cardctl' and 'which cardmgr'.
download kernel source; untar into /usr/src/linux (rename the
kernel-source-2.4.x directory to linux)
make menuconfig
enable pcmcia supp
On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, eDoc wrote:
>
>From whence do I also download pcmcia-cs to match kernel
> 2.4.12 and Unstable? (I looked around and the only site http
> site I found would not respond.)
http://pcmcia-cs.sourceforge.net/ - i keep mine in /usr/src.
>What are the steps I should follow,
Glen,
Thank you for your remarks.
I have read so many online documents about kernels and upgrades
and patches etc. that my eyes and head hurt! I have killed entire
forests with all that I have printed out to read again and mark up and
try.
At this point I could use some very simple ins
you can do pcmcia support under 2.4.x in two ways:
installing the pcmcia packages (more stable, but maybe less feature-rich, and
somewhat more complex to setup).
Compiling pcmcia support into the new 2.4.x kernel, however, note that you'll
still need the pcmcia-cs package installed for full pcmc
On Sunday, October 14, 2001 7:23 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I've installed and compiled the pcmcia source coming with Bunk's stuff
> under potato and kernel 2.4.9 (of course enabling pcmcia in the
> kernel). Then I've installed pcmcia-cs.
>
> Now when I start pcmcia service with two cards ins
Hello.
> Now my questions are:
>
> 1) What driver for the card should I set (ide-cs?)?
If I remember, if the pcmcia package is loaded, the
pcmcia card reader should be recognized automatically.
I don't remember changing anything. The card uses the
ide_cs driver and the listed database should be
To find out the information that your looking for try
lspci -a and lspci -n
HTH
Don
--- Vittorio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've installed and compiled the pcmcia source coming
> with Bunk's stuff
> under potato and kernel 2.4.9 (of course enabling
> pcmcia in the
> kernel). Then I've installed p
On Tue, Oct 09, 2001 at 10:41:03PM +0200, Søren Neigaard wrote:
| Tuesday, October 09, 2001, 9:54:05 PM, dman wrote:
...
| d> | Is this good or bad?
| d> It is good, but not complete. For example right now with this
| d> Inspiron 7500 (3Com PCMCIA NIC) I get :
| d> eth0 Link encap:Ethernet H
On Tue, Oct 09, 2001 at 06:43:36PM +0200, Søren Neigaard wrote:
| I have a Dell Inspiron 7500 with a Xircom CardBus Ethernet 100 + Modem
| 56 (Ethernet Interface).
|
| I can't get my networt up and running. I have at no time specified
| that Debian should use the xirc2ps driver, and I don't know w
Hi,
You need to disable PCMCIA support in the kernel in order to use the
pcmcia-cs package instead.
Read the doc in the pcmcia-cs package.
Ciao.
Cédric
Ok, seems I fell prey to the thing that irritates me most.. no
information..sorry folks.
Ok, PCMCIA seems to be compiling fine, as is the kernel. The install goes
well, 0 hitches. However, I've noticed one thing, there are *far* fewer
modules in /lib/modules/pcmcia than are in the same for th
* On 09-09-01 at 11:10 der.hans ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
+Here quoted text begins+
>
> Is PCMCIA not building or are you just not able to use it? If it's the
> latter look for some driver with 'serial' in the name. I forget what it is.
> modprobe on it and poof things work.
>
[...]
>
Am 08. Sep, 2001 schwäzte secher so:
> I have enabled every PCMCIA choice in the kernel after having started
> minimally, only those selections which I thought were necessary.
> After compile, as per the HOWTO, I built the pcmcia package.
> No Joy.
> Suggestions? Is there a problem with the 2.4.9
Have you tried building your own kernel and your own pcmcia modules with
the kernel-package scripts? That should eliminate your problems with
modules and dependencies.
--mike
On 09 Aug 2001 21:12:17 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi, I'm trying to get my PCMCIA card working with the PCMCIA pac
On 09 Aug 2001 19:11:22 +0200, Stefan Baums wrote:
> Using the separate package with 2.4 kernels is inconvenient because
> you have to compile and install two packages where one can be enough.
Nice to hear you got it to work. I never considered the 2 packages thing
a problem, make-kpkg modules_im
On Thursday, 9 August 2001, Mario Vukelic wrote:
> I don't think it's worth the trouble to try and get it to work with
> 2.4.x drivers if they work the other way anyhow.
Using the separate package with 2.4 kernels is inconvenient because
you have to compile and install two packages where one can
On Thursday, 9 August 2001, Michael Heldebrant wrote:
> For one thing you just said you were running 2.4.6. The
> /lib/modules/2.4.7 is most likely not there.
Sorry, I was trying it out with both 2.4.6 and 2.4.7, and mixed them
up in my email.
> Secondly:
> Your kernel is probably not set to ac
On 09 Aug 2001 18:25:29 +0200, Stefan Baums wrote:
> If, however, I compile the separate pcmcia-source package for use with
> the 2.4 kernel, everything works just fine.
I don't have access to my laptop now, but I remember to have read
(probably in README of pcmcia-source package) that If you wan
For one thing you just said you were running 2.4.6. The
/lib/modules/2.4.7 is most likely not there.
Secondly:
Your kernel is probably not set to accept module symbols from other
compiled modules. This is actually something that you can solve in two
ways I beleive. 1. Compile it yourself (safe
On Mon, Jul 30, 2001 at 10:54:05PM +0100, Stig Brautaset wrote:
> * Aaron Traas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake thus:
> > tried to download the pcmcia-source package (although it looks like
> > these directions were meant exclusively for the 2.2 series kernels),
> > and the make-kpkg modules_image failed
Aaron,
Here's how I FINALLY got mine going
Grab a 2.4.* kernel from ftp.kernel.org as well as the newest pcmcia-cs
package from sourceforge.net. Then compile your 2.4.* kernel with whatever
options you require, however, eliminate ALL pcmcia options from the kernel.
If I remember correctly
* Aaron Traas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake thus:
> tried to download the pcmcia-source package (although it looks like
> these directions were meant exclusively for the 2.2 series kernels),
> and the make-kpkg modules_image failed. What am I doing wrong? Do I
> need to modprobe a module (no modules ar
On Tue, Jul 17, 2001 at 10:02:54AM -0500, Case, Benjamin wrote:
> > I just got an ENCORE PCMCIA Netowrk Card. From their website I d/l the
> > "linux drivers". This consisted of these files:
> >
> > 8390.c, gen1, gen2, and PCNET_CS.c. as well as a readme with the following
> > instructions:
> >
>
On Wednesday 04 July 2001 13:30, Keith O'Connell wrote:
[...]
> I get the impression from other messages that laptops are trickier than
> desktops to set up with linux. Did I just change the gradient on my
> learning curve by taking the laptop on?
>
> Keith
A great source for info is www.linux-lap
On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 07:30:43PM +0100, Keith O'Connell wrote:
> I had two machines running Debian, not well, but working together and I
> was learning as I went. For all sorts or reasons I had to give my wife
> one of the desktop machines and she gave me her laptop.
>
> I partitioned a great ch
On Wednesday 04 July 2001 20:30, Keith O'Connell wrote:
> I had two machines running Debian, not well, but working together and I
> was learning as I went. For all sorts or reasons I had to give my wife
> one of the desktop machines and she gave me her laptop.
>
> I partitioned a great chunk of it
On Saturday 02 June 2001 01:46, vester wrote:
> hello,
>
> just a basic question about pcmcia...should i get the pcmcia source
> package and compile them myself or does the pcmcia-modules package
> basically provide for this?
>
> i compiled my kernel with pcmcia support
The pcmcia support in the
Georg Meier wrote:
> Hi
>
> Volker Böhm wrote:
> > ich suche verzweifelt nach einem benutzbaren und bezahlbaren PCMCIA
> > Modem für mein Linux Notebook (SuSE 7.0). >
>
> nun, wenns günstig sein soll und du etwas Zeit investieren kannst
> dann lies doch mal den Abschnitt der PCMCIA Howto mit den
On Fri, 20 Apr 2001, The Nose Who Knows wrote:
> Eric Richardson wrote:
> > Is this a problem that needs to be looked at for the distribution? It
> > sure makes the out of box experience with Debian a little rough.
>
> I've recently started using two laptops (one belongs to work, one is
> mine) wi
Walt Mankowski wrote:
>
> I'm confused as to how to upgrade my laptop (currently running potato
> 2.2r3) from kernel 2.2.17 to 2.2.19. Which pcmcia-modules package
> should I install? There are four choices:
>
> pcmcia-modules-2.2.19pre17
> pcmcia-modules-2.2.19pre17-compact
> pcmcia-modules-2.
The Nose Who Knows wrote:
>
> Eric Richardson wrote:
> > More than one person is having problems with the startup sequence with
> > pcmcia. Is this a problem with the distribution? I searched open and
> > closed bugs for [EMAIL PROTECTED] and could not find anything reported
> > about this.
> >
>
On Fri, Apr 20, 2001 at 04:42:30PM +1000, The Nose Who Knows wrote:
> Eric Richardson wrote:
> > More than one person is having problems with the startup sequence with
> > pcmcia. Is this a problem with the distribution? I searched open and
> > closed bugs for [EMAIL PROTECTED] and could not find a
On Wed, Mar 21, 2001 at 11:17:41AM -0800, Bill Wohler wrote:
> A friend of mine writes:
>
> P.S. If you know any linux laptop gurus who can recommend a good PCMCIA
> modem
> card that I can get in a hurry, I'd be most appreciative. I'm really
> f*cked
> without one.
>
> Thanks!
I'm using a 56k US Robotics CC1580 modem
(it is aslo a fax modem) It has done a very good job for almost 2 years now...
ok it's not one of the new ones - but it is very reliable!!
Philipp
Bill Wohler wrote:
> A friend of mine writes:
>
> P.S. If you know any linux laptop gurus who can reco
Bill Wohler wrote:
>
> A friend of mine writes:
>
> P.S. If you know any linux laptop gurus who can recommend a good PCMCIA
> modem
> card that I can get in a hurry, I'd be most appreciative. I'm really
> f*cked
> without one.
>
> Thanks!
>
> --
> Bill Wohler <[EMAIL PROTECTED
On Thu, 18 Jan 2001 08:21:39 -0800, Michael Epting said:
> On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 07:52:18PM +, Pollywog wrote:
> >
> > Is there a problem with the PCMCIA modules in kernel 2.2.18?
> > I can build the modules for kernel 2.2.16 but not 2.2.18 and I have
> > tried both several times.
>
On Wed, Jan 17, 2001 at 07:52:18PM +, Pollywog wrote:
>
> Is there a problem with the PCMCIA modules in kernel 2.2.18?
> I can build the modules for kernel 2.2.16 but not 2.2.18 and I have
> tried both several times.
I just did this yesterday, on a "new" Tosiba Tecra 550CDT laptop. It's
run
On Tue, Dec 26, 2000 at 06:24:08PM +0100, Ralf Batri wrote:
> Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2000 18:24:08 +0100
> From: Ralf Batri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Debian-User-Mailinglist
> Cc: Manuel Hendel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: PCMCIA - AVM ISDN Karte
>
> >
&
>
> Sorry, but the following packages have unmet dependencies:
> pcmcia-modules-2.2.17: Depends: kernel-image-2.2.17 (= 1:2.2.17-1)
> but it is not going to be installed
> E: Sorry, broken packages
>
> can anyone help me out.
how about overriding the depencies with
apt-get install --nodeps pcm
On Mon, Dec 25, 2000 at 05:02:47PM +0100, Ralf Batri wrote:
> Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2000 17:02:47 +0100
> From: Ralf Batri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Debian-User-Mailinglist
> Cc: Manuel Hendel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: PCMCIA - AVM ISDN Karte
>
> On Mo
On Mon, Dez 25, 2000 at 02:13:14 +0100, Manuel Hendel wrote:
> can someone tell me what I need to run a pcmcia isdn card? I got a avm
> pcmcia isdn card.
nothing special, the AVM-A1-PCMCIA is supported by the hisax-modul
you just have to set the right type !
Greetings Ralf
___
amble_key=0x0"
On Tue, 12 Dec 2000, Brian Mays wrote:
> Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2000 22:11:32 -0500
> From: Brian Mays <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: dude <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: PCMCIA Help
>
> > i've decided to re-load RH7 on it,
> > and look at its configuration files for PCMCIA
> >
> > you would happen to know where to look would you?
>
> Look in /etc/sysconfig/pcmcia and the /etc/pcmcia directory.
>
> - Brian
>
2000, Brian Mays wrote:
> Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2000 18:32:07 -0500
> From: Brian Mays <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: dude <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: PCMCIA Help
>
> Hmm ... I'm not quite sure how to diagnose your problem.
>
> Is your card inserted when the s
On Mon, Nov 20, 2000 at 11:18:49AM +1100, Bek Oberin wrote:
> Just installed the latest 2.2.17 pcmcia modules package and
> noticed it depended on the kernel image. Why? I want to build
> my OWN kernel, not use the image. couldn't it depend on either
> the kernel image OR the kernel source?
The
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