Thanks for the help everyone. The RAM was the
problem, even though it didn't appear to be in
incorrectly, after I pushed them in a little harder,
the computer booted up all right. The cables are
right next to the RAM, it must have gotten a little
dislodged.
Thanks again
Bill
Hi,
This isn't a Gentoo related problem, but a hardware
one (I know next to nothing about hardware).
First of all I have a Micron computer with a floppy
drive, DVD-read drive (/dev/hdc), CDR drive
(/dev/hdd), a master harddrive (/dev/hde), and a slave
harddrive (/dev/hdf).
Yesterday my
Bill Six wrote:
Hi,
This isn't a Gentoo related problem, but a hardware
one (I know next to nothing about hardware).
First of all I have a Micron computer with a floppy
drive, DVD-read drive (/dev/hdc), CDR drive
(/dev/hdd), a master harddrive (/dev/hde), and a slave
harddrive (/dev/hdf).
On Thursday 09 June 2005 23:45, Bill Six wrote:
Hi,
This isn't a Gentoo related problem, but a hardware
one (I know next to nothing about hardware).
First of all I have a Micron computer with a floppy
drive, DVD-read drive (/dev/hdc), CDR drive
(/dev/hdd), a master harddrive (/dev/hde),
Bill Six schreef:
Hi,
This isn't a Gentoo related problem, but a hardware
one (I know next to nothing about hardware).
First of all I have a Micron computer with a floppy
drive, DVD-read drive (/dev/hdc), CDR drive
(/dev/hdd), a master harddrive (/dev/hde), and a slave
harddrive
On Fri, June 10, 2005 12:07 am, Holly Bostick said:
Last time I let my dad touch my computer haha.
Awww, give him a break. How else is he going to learn?
On his own computer?
--
Neil Bothwick
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Holly Bostick wrote:
Bill Six schreef:
Hi,
This isn't a Gentoo related problem, but a hardware
one (I know next to nothing about hardware).
First of all I have a Micron computer with a floppy
drive, DVD-read drive (/dev/hdc), CDR drive
(/dev/hdd), a master harddrive (/dev/hde), and a
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