On Fri, 11 Nov 2005, David R. Litwin wrote:
> I have an interesting update. I normally use my laptop in my room, which I
> like to keep between 11 and 15 degrees centigrade. However, in the kitchen,
No current consumer computer hardware will fail to work on that temperature
range, unless it is def
I have an interesting update. I normally use my laptop in my room, which I like to keep between 11 and 15 degrees centigrade. However, in the kitchen, where I am currently, it is around 22 degrees centigrade. After three or so hours of usage, it has yet to freeze.
Could it be that the temperature i
Are you using ATI or nVidia proprietary kernel modules? If so, get rid ofthem and see if the crash goes away. If it does, you know where to direct
your complains.If you are rederening to what is currently in my kernel, I am using the standard linux-image from the Debian repository and, subsequent
On Wed, 09 Nov 2005, David R. Litwin wrote:
> I have a multithreading processor. After doing more research, I finaly
> figured out that the smp is the kernel for me.
Only if it runs whatever you like to do with your computer faster than a
non-SMP kernel. SMT (multithreading) is not always faster.
I haven't had the pleasure of running an smp kernel. Those are for Symmetricmulti processing if I'm not mistaken, and you need two processors or maybe a
dual core cpu.I have a multithreading processor. After doing more research, I finaly figured out that the smp is the kernel for me.So, I highly do
But, I do not know how> to start KDE from a console: Doing startx gives Gnome, which is not what I
> use.IIRC it's startkde (or possibly start-kde, it's been a while).This may be totally off the wall but I was recently unable to log onvia kdm after an upgrade and, to cut a long story short, it even
On Sun November 6 2005 06:30 pm, David R. Litwin wrote:
> I have a Pentium Four processor with 3.06GHz speed. As far as I can tell,
> this means that I am eligible to use a 686-smp kernel. Though in comparison
> to the non smp kernel it seems to be much faster, an odd thing is also
> happening whic
On 06/11/05, David R. Litwin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a Pentium Four processor with 3.06GHz speed. As far as I can tell, this means that I am eligible to use a 686-smp kernel. Though in comparison to the non smp kernel it seems to be much faster, an odd thing is also happening which I can
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