goes.
Talk to you soon,
Lacy
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I want to have my hostname assigned by the DNS server. This should be
set up for me but I'm not sure how it works on my end as far as my
computer knowing how to name itself, etc. In the past I have changed
the hostname of a computer by editing a startup script but I can't seem
to find it thi
tarted the install from CD and am planning on compiling a
kernel and seeing if I can get something going with the modules.
Thanks for all the ideas :)
Billy
Alex Malinovich wrote:
(remember to hit Reply to All so that your replies go to the list aswell.)On Tue, 2002-02-19 at 14:26, William
I am having the same problem on two different computers. One is an
Optiplex GX150 and one is a GX110.
The problem is that the 3Com on board network does not detect in the
debian install, the 110 has a 3C579 and the 150 a 3C509 from what I can
tell. Both computers run fine with Red Hat.
Any
I installed Potato on a PC at the house (it is not on the net) and I
opted out of network support. I configured the network files in etc- I
don't recall them all right now but I got them out of an old book and
they always worked before. I just want 127.0.0.1 to work. I have just
been turning
, William Lacy wrote:
I installed debian on a desktop computer and for some reason although I chose "make a boot floppy" the install script wrote "grub" the the mbr of /dev/hda. I was stuck in a place with nothing but some debian cds, but I digress. I tried to load lilo
I installed debian on a desktop computer and for some reason although I
chose "make a boot floppy" the install script wrote "grub" the the mbr
of /dev/hda. I was stuck in a place with nothing but some debian cds,
but I digress. I tried to load lilo but I messed up and typed
boot=/dev/hda1 ins
Hi guys,
I am trying to install debian 2.2 on my second hard drive. The official
cd I have boots up (using disc 2) and I set the keyboard, partition and
initialise the native and swap partitions. I choose not to be compatible
with pre 2.2 kernals. It is now time to install kernal and modules
Hi guys,
I am trying to install debian 2.2 on my second hard drive. The official
cd I have boots up (using disc 2) and I set the keyboard, partition and
initialise the native and swap partitions. I choose not to be compatible
with pre 2.2 kernals. It is now time to install kernal and modules
Can I set up /etc/fstab so that anyone at the console can mount a given
filesystem, and also so that any user can write to these filesystems
automatically without executing "su"?
I know this is an old thread but I don't think anyone responded with
this response:
There is someone working on KDE- his name is Ivan Moore, this was posted
here a week or so ago- here is where to find the debs:
http://snowcrash.tdyc.com/debian/dists/
>From what I have seen Ivan has been putting
I have a SB64 and I know it can be a hassle to set up so here is a copy
of my isapnp.conf file...
I don't like carrying a lot of baggage so I just deleted the extra junk
in this file instead of uncommenting the good stuff. I think its pretty
wise to stick with the kernel that you have for the reas
lacing it and editing the file
listings in the Packages file.
So what I am asking is: can I get the best of both worlds and keep local
and kde seperate while still listing the multicds in dselect?
Any help will be greatly appreciated.
William Lacy
There is a lot- I do my best and don't get nearly all of it read. A lot
of times I don't absorb what I do read properly which was the case with
reading "the great x reorganization". I guess that other things told
about removing xdm and xfs but I only remember the xbase thing, which I
did.
I real
because of the
additional level of control in debian- just because I was bummed about
one thing doesn't mean that *I* don't like the new organization.
Thanks for the great system, I'm sorry I offended you. Please consider
what I said about avoiding this sort of thing
Ever since the upgrade, my "home" and "end" keys don't work in xterm-
what is the deal?
just thought I'd let my opinion be known.
Still love Debian =)
Bill Lacy
PS: "User friendly" OSs should come with replacement reset switches (for
later ;)
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