On Wed, 26 Oct 2005 14:17:51 +0200, Stef Coene wrote:
>> IS EXACTLY what I would like to do. Problem is I have no idea how to
>> copy on a new kernel and have that load as the default kernel. At that
>> point I wouldn't know what to be looking for in dmesg and lspci to
>> make a new kernel, and on
On Wednesday 26 October 2005 06:26, David Bennett wrote:
> This may seem like a terribly lazy question but this:
> > I usually run with a custom kernel that matches my hardware
> > exactly. When moving to another box, I first copy on a
> > recent knoppix kernel and modules and make that my default
This may seem like a terribly lazy question but this:
> I usually run with a custom kernel that matches my hardware
> exactly. When moving to another box, I first copy on a
> recent knoppix kernel and modules and make that my default
> kernel. Once on the new box I can see what hardware it
> fou
On Tue, Oct 25, 2005 at 07:33:00AM -0400, Matt Mossholder wrote:
> With regards to running the hard drive in a different system, yes, you
> generally can. There are a few things to be careful with (raid, "special"
> controllers", etc.) which might make this more difficult, but typically it is
> OK.
On Tue, 2005-10-25 at 00:46 -0400, Steve Adeff wrote:
On Tuesday 25 October 2005 00:26, David Bennett wrote:
good call, I didn't even think of that, had that problem a LOOONG time ago,
good lesson to learn, its one of those things you'll never let happen again.
as to the question about movi
On Tuesday 25 October 2005 00:26, David Bennett wrote:
> Matt, I am glad you brought this up.
> I assembled my own board and had no idea what was going on with those
> screws.
>
> Excuse my ignorance, but how should these be screwed? I am not sure
>
> what the following means:
> >Check to make sure
On Tue, Oct 25, 2005 at 01:26:20PM +0900, David Bennett wrote:
> Excuse my ignorance, but how should these be screwed? I am not sure
What he's talking about are the hexagonal brass stand-offs that have a
threaded pin on one end and a threaded socket on the other. You're
supposed to screw them int
Matt, I am glad you brought this up.
I assembled my own board and had no idea what was going on with those screws.
Excuse my ignorance, but how should these be screwed? I am not sure
what the following means:
>Check to make sure all of the holes in the motherboard that
> are metal lined are mount
That is interesting to hear... I wonder if maybe I should change the
Gigabyte board as well?
I don't know much about Linux, but if I just take everything off my
board (memory, cpu, disks everything) and plunk it into a new
computer, will it work? I am currently running FC4.
Oh no, am I going to h
On Mon, 2005-10-24 at 19:53 -0800, Jon Reynolds wrote:
David Bennett wrote:
> I am getting completely frustrated and am hoping someone has some
> suggestions. This might be Linux related, but I have a feeling it is
> hardware, tell me what you think. (A while back I posted about my
> Linux sy
David Bennett wrote:
I am getting completely frustrated and am hoping someone has some
suggestions. This might be Linux related, but I have a feeling it is
hardware, tell me what you think. (A while back I posted about my
Linux system crashing, here is where we are at:)
I am running a Gigabye Mo
On Monday 24 October 2005 23:05, David Bennett wrote:
> I am getting completely frustrated and am hoping someone has some
> suggestions. This might be Linux related, but I have a feeling it is
> hardware, tell me what you think. (A while back I posted about my
> Linux system crashing, here is where
I am getting completely frustrated and am hoping someone has some
suggestions. This might be Linux related, but I have a feeling it is
hardware, tell me what you think. (A while back I posted about my
Linux system crashing, here is where we are at:)
I am running a Gigabye Motherboard with Fedora C
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