>given that windoze requires that any new hardware installation be
>acknowledged by a cold boot, regardless of claims made by that os, i'm
>willing to bet that the lack of recognition is one-sided, i.e., soft-booting
>into windoze, rather that in linux. is that the case? it would surprise me to
>hear that a loading linux kernel would miss what you've got.
In either direction, if I do a warm reboot, the boot process just stops at some
point, and I have to power off to get control of the machine back.
I'm not sure that this is still the case, I'll check when I'm done with my
taxes!
In windows, the slow animation of that horizontal bar in the boot screen
freezes. It's more informative in Linux, if I recall correctly it freezes the
first time one of the startup programs tries to access the ethernet.
Michael D. Crawford
GoingWare Inc. - Expert Software Development and Consulting
http://www.goingware.com/
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Tilting at Windmills for a Better Tomorrow.
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