Information on the e100 driver can be found at:
http://www.intel.com/support/network/adapter/1000/linux/e
100.htm
> I have a Toshiba Satellite Pro 4600 laptop. It installed Redhat 7.3.
> Tthe laptop connects to Internet through a hub(KTI 10BASE-T Ethernet
> Hub KH-9M). But the network connecti
http://www.linux-laptop.net
Works well on Aramda E500 Compaq laptop. You might have troubles with a
brand new machine -- have to wait until they have drivers written for it.
-Original Message-
From: Akiko M. Allen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, June 21, 2002 1:15 AM
To: [EMAI
On Friday 21 June 2002 14:56, KnowHow Support Team wrote:
> If you are buying new you will want to stay away from Compaq. Their
> machines are pretty much windows based only it seems. We probably get 250
> emails a day asking why they can't seem to get Redhat or Mandrake
> installed on a new com
If you are buying new you will want to stay away from Compaq. Their
machines are pretty much windows based only it seems. We probably get 250
emails a day asking why they can't seem to get Redhat or Mandrake
installed on a new compaq laptop. After doing some surfing, it seems to
me the only dri
So far, the Dell notebooks seem to be rather well supported.
On Thu, 20 Jun 2002, Akiko M. Allen wrote:
> Hello. I am considering buying a notebook to use with Redhat 7.3.
> Which notebooks do you suggest?
> Thank you.
>
>
___
Redhat-list maili
I've had a Dell Inspiron 3200 for about 2 years. Of course, the guts are totaly
different from the 5000e (so I won't bother talking about the internals) but I've had
a couple of problems with the quality of construction:
(1) Both of the plastic hinges, which connect the LCD to the main box, cr
> Seems I can meet all of my "musts" as well as half of my "would be
> nices" with any of these. Any thoughts? At this point, I'm heavily
> leaning toward the ThinkPad. I've always liked them, and they're very
> solidly built.
I would highly recommend the Dell Inspiron, from my experience. I a
One thing I really like about the Dell is the docking station. All the
cables (network, mouse, keyboard, monitor, external drives, sound, and
power) all plug into it. So instead of having to plug all of these in
when coming back to my desk, I just slide it in the docking station and
turn on the