Thanks Rainer.  Yes, with the hard drive slots in mind this is indeed an R5000.

 

 Rainer Canavan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> I'm almost positive it is an R5000. But I could be wrong (have been before
> ;)
>> Guillaume Plourde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:R5000 or R10000?
>> Some cpu are still unsupported or no kernel are compiled for them i think.
>>
>> I think the R10000 180 is one of the unsupported cpu.


And I think R10k 180MHz doesn't even exist in O2s. R10k was avaliable
as 150, 175, 195, 225 and 250MHz, R5k were 180 and 200MHz, R5k2 300MHz.
So unless you have something really exotic, it's R5k. Just check if
it has one or two slots for harddisks, R10k has only one.

rainer



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