Unless you are using a laptop system, you do not need kernel-pcmcia-cs
installed.

Michael

--
Michael Viron
Core Systems Group
Simple End User Linux
>Use "rpm -qa | grep kernel" to see what kernels are installed. On my
>system this shows:
>
>       kernel-pcmcia-cs-3.1.31-13
>       kernel-source-2.4.20-20.9
>       kernel-2.4.20-19.9
>       kernel-2.4.20-20.9
>
>Use rpm to erase all but the two most recent kernels. In my case I only
>have two so I would leave it as it is. But, If I wanted to keep only the
>very latest kernel I could use:
>
>       rpm -e kernel-2.4.20-19.9
>
>Notice that "kernel-pcmcia-cs-3.1.31-13" is not a kernel and should not
>be deleted.
>
>-- 
>Robert C. Paulsen, Jr.
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
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>


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