I did a new install from sunsite.uio.no rsynch. And here are my new comments.
I've included some of my previous comments when I'm modifying what I thought
before... This is an expert development install with everything.
On Thu, Sep 21, 2000 at 05:08:23AM -0700, Ben Reser wrote:
> The list of daemons to start is also really hard to use. The scrolling "wraps"
> around. I.E. if you scroll to the bottom it will keep scrolling back to the
> top. Which makes it really confusing. Especially if you're trying to use Page
> Up etc to get around.
Well it isn't doing this now but I have a few new issues.
* pageup/pagedown don't work.
* items ending in a colon don't have "baloon help" e.g. wu-ftupd:
* the items ending in colons also seem to be in the wrong sort order too.
* xinetd shows twice
> I selected the 1280x1024 resolution but got 1024x768 after the install. :(
> No matter what I do I can't get 1280x1024, used to work just fine under 7.1.
> I'm running XF86 4.01 and this is in a Gateway Solo 9100 laptop so it's an ATI
> video card.
> This is with XF86 4.01 -18mdk
Okay I figured this issue out on my own. My internal LCD screen wasn't "off"
like it was supposed to be. I'd had my bios set to not turn it on. I'm not
sure why it was back on. Weirdness...
linuxconf is still messed up as referenced in another thread.
> On my desktop I have a link to a zip drive but I don't have a zip drive hooked
> up and there is no /mnt/zip
still there.
Other things that are new or that I haven't listed yet:
kcontrol has no screensavers listed in the box.
They are installed. But they aren't showing in the box.
When running the install it gets to the network setup part. It tells me it's
already been done on this machine. I choose Done. It prompts me for the type
of card. I hit cancel. It *appears* to go on. Asks me about my timezone and
system clock. Then I'm right back at the network setup telling me the network
has been setup. It keeps doing this until I select a card. But the install
does work.
Good work guys it is getting better :)
--
Ben Reser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://ben.reser.org
"Heuristics are bug ridden by definition. If they didn't
have bugs, then they'd be algorithms."