Re: [gentoo-user] [OT] Laptop in Europe

2003-08-25 Thread Jaroslaw Rzepecki
Hi! You do need a plug adapter and you do not need voltage converter if your ac adapter runs on both 110V and 220V (it should be written on a ac adapter) Cheers Jarek -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list

Re: [gentoo-user] [OT] Laptop in Europe

2003-08-25 Thread Scott Carmichael
After searching and searching and searching, I finally found one internet cafe in Paris, and it doesn't seem to me that it had laptop stations... just about 100 PCs you could get on the internet with. Haven't been to Rome yet, so I don't know if it's different there... but yeah, Paris didn't seem

Re: [gentoo-user] [OT] Laptop in Europe

2003-08-25 Thread Chris I
On 2003.08.24 22:10, Scott Carmichael wrote: After searching and searching and searching, I finally found one internet cafe in Paris, and it doesn't seem to me that it had laptop stations... just about 100 PCs you could get on the internet with. Haven't been to Rome yet, so I don't know if it's

Re: [gentoo-user] [OT] Laptop in Europe

2003-08-25 Thread Bryan Feir
On Mon, Aug 25, 2003 at 01:47:10AM -0400, Chris I wrote: I recently drove across Canada, and had a very hard time finding internet cafe's that provided wired _or_ wireless access for laptops. However, I had a fairly decent time finding open wireless access points. Of course you have to

RE: [gentoo-user] [OT] Laptop in Europe

2003-08-25 Thread Gwendolyn van der Linden
From some of what I've heard, most parts of Europe have their networks publicly owned still, so within a single country it should be fairly consistent. No idea on how well that would work travelling between countries, though. Phone jacks and 220V plugs are typically different between

Re: [gentoo-user] [OT] Laptop in Europe

2003-08-25 Thread Andrea Gagliardi
Gwendolyn van der Linden wrote: From some of what I've heard, most parts of Europe have their networks publicly owned still, so within a single country it should be fairly consistent. No idea on how well that would work travelling between countries, though. Phone jacks and 220V plugs