I disabled the onboard network card in bios and now it starts. The
second network card still works fine. I guess it is back to the store
for another motherboard. In the meantime I will add another card and
see how things go. Thanks for the tips.

2008/6/10 Ville Pöntinen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> 2008/6/9 Charles Austin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> ...
>> If all else fails, burn a "live" CD (Knoppix) and boot your machine
>> from that.  You should get full access to your drives, and should be
>> able to edit the boot loader conf file to get the system into single
>> user mode (again, you will need to google for the changes to do this
>> in LILO).  Worst case, from a "Live CD" OS you copy off critical
>> directories in the event you cannot restore this installation.
>>
>> Charles
>
> With live-CD (Knoppix or Ubuntu) you can also chroot yourself to
> Ubuntu on hard drive and try updating/fixing system. Much like
> chrooting to /opt. On my computer like this:
>
> sudo mkdir /temp
> sudo mount /dev/sda2 /temp
> sudo chroot /temp
>
> Replace /dev/sda2 with your Ubuntu-partition which you can find out
> with sudo fdisk -l.
>
> Ville Pöntinen
> Raisio, Finland
>
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