Thanks, guys.  I bumped it up to fc15 and the problem went away.

As for CentOS, I like the idea of a more stable platform.  I;d prefer not
to be upgrading all the time.  I tried a test install of CentOS on a spare
machine and it seems to be picky about my older motherboard, or something
in my BIOS.  The install finally went through, but the subsequent reboot
never finished, and I got a stack trace...Oh well.

On Wed, Feb 22, 2012 at 9:53 AM, John Pilkington <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 22/02/12 14:25, George Galt wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Feb 22, 2012 at 7:54 AM, Larry K<[email protected]>
>>  wrote:
>>
>>> I just used yum upgrade to go from fc12 to fc14, and mostly, it went
>>> well.
>>>  I have the system up, and was able to install the latest nvidia-graphics
>>> package using yum.  now, when I try to install mythtv, I get these
>>> errors:
>>>
>>
>  I'm surprised Axel still has Fedora 14 files around.  Fedora 14 went
>> EOL in December
>> (http://lists.fedoraproject.**org/pipermail/announce/2011-**
>> November/003010.html<http://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/announce/2011-November/003010.html>
>> ).
>>  Fedora 15 works fine.  You really should move up -- or if you want a
>> more stable platform, move to CentOS 6.
>>
>> As for your problem, my guess is that you are running into a problem
>> some of us experienced a few weeks back regarding an ABI change to
>> some of the Fedora updates files.  It was fixed for FC15 and FC16, but
>> since FC14 is EOL, it probably won't get fixed there.
>>
>
> In fact there are newly updated f14 packages there, but I don't imagine
> that will go on for much longer.
>
> I haven't seen any other comments about this news item, which reinforces
> your comment.
>
>  
> http://nl.zdnet.co.uk/**qGne3BDaic/GqDpG<http://nl.zdnet.co.uk/qGne3BDaic/GqDpG>
>>
>
> By Ben Woods , 1 February, 2012 12:23
> Daily Newsletters
>
> Open-source software provider Red Hat has said it will support its current
> generation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 for 10 years, adding three years
> to the platform's lifecycle.
>
> Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 5 will also now have a 10-year lifecycle,
> the company said in a blog post on Tuesday.
>
>
>
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