> if it's ok with you the priority will be on people with linux kernel > / u-boot (etc.) experience
Understandable, that seems to be what you need the most at this point. > well, "sysadmin" to me says "clearly capable of trusting and > following written instructions to the letter" which surprisingly, from > my brother's experience as a teacher, is a rare skill: he found that > many of the kids just totally locked up and froze, and were literally > incapable of following step-by-step written instructions, even when > verbally prompted as to what to do. Previous to my current position I worked in Linux customer support, so... I'm unfortunately quite familiar with that behavior. :) Sometimes it's a result of making hidden assumptions in the instructions though, when you have enough experience with something you'll make mental leaps that someone without exposure to the material might not. > they don't... but i have some casework sets. the primary thing to > make absolutely sure when putting them on is: (a) get the plastic part > on the right way up (as it tells the PCMCIA socket which pin is which) > and (b) make absolutely sure that there's yellow insulating stickers > on the inside, and that they're not damaged in any way. also bear in > mind they're hell to take off again...but that you really shouldn't > need to. Sounds good to me - if you can find more people with kernel/u-boot experience they can jump ahead of me, but let me know if the prototypes aren't all accounted for and I'm in for one. _______________________________________________ arm-netbook mailing list arm-netbook@lists.phcomp.co.uk http://lists.phcomp.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/arm-netbook Send large attachments to arm-netb...@files.phcomp.co.uk