Simple question about appletalk

2006-02-23 Thread Gabriel George POPA
I need to put a laptop running Mac OS X (10.3 I think) in my OpenBSD powered network - OpenBSD router/firewall. The problem is that I don't know if I need Appletalk or not installed (I have an urgent problem that must be solved with this laptop, but it's not mine and I haven't worked

Re: Simple question about appletalk

2006-02-23 Thread Bryan Allen
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 On Feb 23, 2006, at 1:52 PM, Gabriel George POPA wrote: I need to put a laptop running Mac OS X (10.3 I think) in my OpenBSD powered network - OpenBSD router/firewall. The problem is that I don't know if I need Appletalk or not insta

Re: Simple question about appletalk

2006-02-23 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Thu, Feb 23, 2006 at 08:52:13PM +0200, Gabriel George POPA wrote: >I need to put a laptop running Mac OS X (10.3 I think) in my > OpenBSD powered network - OpenBSD router/firewall. The problem is that I > don't know > if I need Appletalk or not installed (I have an urgent problem t

Re: Simple question about appletalk

2006-02-23 Thread Bryan Irvine
Sorry for the top-post but there jsut wasn't anywhere appropriate for a type of thing. If the laptop only needs www access no appletalk is needed. Appletalk is purely a file serving mechanism, like samba or nfs. If you need appletalk it's pretty easy to set up on OpenBSD. --Bryan On 2/23/06,

Re: Simple question about appletalk

2006-02-24 Thread Stefek Zaba
Bryan Irvine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > If the laptop only needs www access no appletalk is needed. Appletalk > is purely a file serving mechanism, like samba or nfs. If you need > appletalk it's pretty easy to set up on OpenBSD. Well... Appletalk itself is a lower-level protocol than samba