On Wednesday 02 August 2006 22:28, frank wrote:
Booting from the Gentoo liveCD 2006 puts my clock back for 2 hours.
How did you determine that? What time zone does your system run? Did you
select a time zone on the LiveCD after booting?
--
Bo Andresen
pgp3slexd6NX0.pgp
Description: PGP
Booting the life-CD and starting the Gentoo-installer, there is no
possibility to set the date.
Regards
Frank
On Wed, 2006-08-02 at 18:01 -0400, Stephen wrote:
On Wednesday 02 August 2006 16:28, frank wrote:
Booting from the Gentoo liveCD 2006 puts my clock back for 2 hours.
Did you
On Wednesday 02 August 2006 16:28, frank wrote:
Booting from the Gentoo liveCD 2006 puts my clock back for 2 hours.
Did you set the date? You need to set that with the date command.
As mentioned in the handbook.
http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/handbook-x86.xml?part=1chap=5#doc_chap1
just did this today,
i didnt seem to see the REgenerating notice when i did just the gentoo kernel,
but when i need to get my video card working better, and booted with the
gentoo-nofb
it did pause at Regenerating /etc/ld.so.cache
but only for maybe 15 seconds, and this is on an old 1.2Ghz
On Thu, 11 May 2006 04:47:26 -0400
ted leslie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
just did this today,
i didnt seem to see the REgenerating notice when i did just the
gentoo kernel, but when i need to get my video card working better,
and booted with the gentoo-nofb
Well, my first boot what the
On Thu, 11 May 2006 11:03:28 +0200
Arnau Bria [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 11 May 2006 04:47:26 -0400
ted leslie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
just did this today,
i didnt seem to see the REgenerating notice when i did just the
gentoo kernel, but when i need to get my video card
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