--- Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Nonetheless, that shouldn't be an issue. Your Windows side should be
> unaffected by anything you do on the Linux side, and your Linux side
> does not need to play with the Domain, inasmuch as you can set it up
> to
> let you log in locally, without
Sorry, this is from a failed delivery so I am re-forwarding -- please
consider one quote level as my original message:
> --- Robert Ian Smit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > * Erik Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [04-10-2002 22:34]:
> > > argument), so what steps should I
--- Robert Ian Smit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > write. I took a few guesses based on the man page:
> >
> > auto eth0-work
> > iface eth0-work inet dhcp
> >
> > auto eth1-work
> > iface eth1-work inet dhcp
>
> I think that getting rid of "-work" will help you a great deal in
> getting it to
--- Erik Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thanks very much for the advice about what to do. I didn't know
> about
> the "modconf" program, so I ran it (as root), and selected the driver
> you mentioned -- 3C56X. It installed successfully (accordin
--- Adam Galant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 2 Oct 2002, Erik Price wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > I am new to Debian and installation of linux, and am trying to get
> my
> > network card recognized. It is a 3Com 3905B model (I believe), and
> I&
Hello,
I am new to Debian and installation of linux, and am trying to get my
network card recognized. It is a 3Com 3905B model (I believe), and I'm
not sure what steps to take for that. The installer program didn't
recognize the card on its own, but I know that it's in there, because
the machin
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