Linux-Hardware Digest #540, Volume #9             Mon, 1 Mar 99 19:13:37 EST

Contents:
  Re: Moving & Switching Large Hard Drives (Stephen La Joie)
  Re: How to download xFree86? ("Woutur")
  Re: Sound card question
  Linux Q2 & RIVA TNT (William Montgomery)
  Drivers for TurtleBeach Montego A3D Sound Card and Diamond Fire GL 1000  Pro Video 
Card (Keith Olivares)
  Re: Need printer sugestions! :-) (Grant Taylor)
  Re: Add another HD causes boot faiure (Andrew Comech)
  Re: advice sought for linux & fujitsu c350 lifebook ("TURBO1010")
  Re: SCSI timeouts on all three channels? ("Martin")
  Will rage 128 be supported? (Paul Sian)
  Re: Soundblater 16
  Re: Small pump for liquid cooling...
  Re: running executable from cdrom? ("J�rgen Exner")
  CD-ROM Problems, Philips CM206 ("James Breitinger")
  Re: Need printer sugestions! :-) (Snoop Baron)
  Re: Laptop suspend *not*on*disk* ? (William Cherry)
  Re: Zoom modem and Linux (Jose Urena)
  Re: Does Cyrix support linux
  Re: laser printer for linux (Grant Taylor)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: Stephen La Joie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Moving & Switching Large Hard Drives
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 21:17:03 GMT



Brian Schell wrote:

> The drive on my Linux sever is starting to make funny sounds after running
> non-stop for over a year. So I'm upgrading before its too late.
>
> Two drive related questions:
>
> A) I just picked up a 13.1 Gig Drive(Western Digital if that matters). The
> instructions say I have to use the EZ-Drive software before the drive will
> work.  Is this actually required for Linux or just Winblows? If not, is
> there anything special I need to know to get it to work in Linux?

I've been reading about this myself. I understand LINUX can handle it,but
Windows uses the BIOS call 13, and this BIOS call doesn't read the
absolute number of segmants.

It's a problem, as I want half my disk to be LINUX and half Windows.

> B) Is there are good drive copying software that works under Linux? The
> setup and software I have works flawlessly now. I **CAN** re-install and
> configure everything, but I'd rather not. In the Windows world, DriveImage
> and DriveCopy are available. Is there anything similar in the linux world?
>
> Thanks!



--
Chill out. It's just my opinion,
even if it IS true.



------------------------------

From: "Woutur" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to download xFree86?
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 22:37:19 +0100

How to install it:

Go to the dir where you downloaded the files, this can even be a mounted
Fat32 partitition.
Type:

rpm -Uvh *.rpm

And everything is done automatically!

ComFuMasta heeft geschreven in bericht ...
>it really depends on what video card you have.
>but i got mine from
>ftp.linux.updates.com
>download:
>XFree86-3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>XFree86-VGA16-3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>XFree86-SVGA-3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>XFree86-XFree86Setup-3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>XFree86-libs-3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>XFree86-devel-3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>XFree86-75dpi.fonts-3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>XFree86-100dpi.fonts3.3.3.1-1.i386.rpm
>Xconfigurator-3.89-1.i386.rpm
>
>download all of these and let me know. and i will walk you through it.
>i cant remember what order they are installed in
>
>comfumasta
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>Eirik wrote in message <7bbf0u$nma$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>>Hi
>>I cant' seem to find out how to download xFree86. I got tje URL:
>>http://www.xfree86.org/#getting
>>but I don't know what to download when I reach the ftp site.
>>And when I've downloaded it. How do I install it?
>>I use redhat 5.2
>>
>>Eirik
>>
>>
>>
>
>



------------------------------

From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: 
comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.help,comp.os.linux.misc,comp.os.linux
Subject: Re: Sound card question
Date: 1 Mar 1999 22:39:47 GMT

> > http://www.opensound.com/download.cgi
> >
> > Download oss demo and install it,,,if it works then buy it, I usually don't
> > reccommend throwing money at a problem to solve it,,for for $20,  OSS  is
> > worth it's weight in gold for configuring sound cards :)  got my ad1816a
> > noname sound card working no probs

Also consider the completely alternative soundcard drivers at
http://alsa.jcu.cz which are (for the most part) OSS compatible
and have a number of advantages:
[1] The documentation is better, both of the API and the source code
[2] Completely GPL
[3] You get a user library that handles all of the ioctl() calls for you.
[4] The buffering system is better thought out and may give better performance.

There are some disadvantages too:
[1] The author is trying to write a system that is totally future proof and
    so has made things more complex than OSS in order to ensure that every
    eventuality is covered (some would think this an advantage but I'm sure
    that it could be trimmed down a lot).
[2] Less people use it so it is harder to find someone to help if something
    won't work.

>   I'm a bit confused here. I thought linux already came with OSS support.
> Can someone explain what drivers linux is using?

Briefly, the original sound system for Linux was OSS which was originally
completely GPL. Then the OSS split and released a non-free version with
extra features and a free version which was bundled with the Linux kernel.
Then independent development modified the free version as kernel development
continued so that the current 2.2.2 kernels use an almost-OSS system.

The ALSA system was a parallel sideline that has had some small influence
on the development of the kernel. With the latest kernels, ALSA just uses
the standard module interface and you can load ALSA modules without
recompiling anything in the kernel. You can even use the OSS module for a
while then pull that out and load up the ALSA module without rebooting.

        - Tel



------------------------------

From: William Montgomery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.games.quake,alt.os.linux
Subject: Linux Q2 & RIVA TNT
Date: Mon, 01 Mar 1999 17:14:06 -0500
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Has anyone successfully found/got working an OpenGL lib for the Linux
port of Quake 2 that works with the RIVA TNT chipset? It seems like it
would be very straightforward to write a driver to do this, as the TNT
adheres to the OpenGL standard (as opposed to 3dfx cards like the
Voodoo's that use the special MesaGL driver). I greatly appreciate any
help; I *really* don't like having to boot into 98 to play GL Quake2.

--Bill / beotch

------------------------------

From: Keith Olivares <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Drivers for TurtleBeach Montego A3D Sound Card and Diamond Fire GL 1000  Pro 
Video Card
Date: Mon, 01 Mar 1999 17:23:31 -0500

Greetings:

I'd like to get linux installed on my machine (Dell Dimensions XPS D333)
which used a Diamond Fire GL Pro 1000 video card and a TurtleBeach
Montego A3D sound card.  Unfortunately, none of the manufacturers have
drivers that work with Linux.  Can someone help me with this?  Thanks.

Keith Olivares



------------------------------

From: Grant Taylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Need printer sugestions! :-)
Date: 01 Mar 1999 12:41:07 -0500

Snoop Baron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> I need to get a Color Ink Jet printer. I'm looking for something at
> around $500 or less. I want a printer that will work well with Linux,
> print PostScript files (native support would be best (faster right)),
> and work well under WordPerfect 8 (what my family uses for Word
> Processing (it's great btw :-) ). All suggestions would be most welcome
> the last printer I purchased is my old dot matrix Panasonic.

The Printing HOWTO's compatibility listing should answer your
question.  http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/pht/printer_list.cgi

Actually, native Postscript support isn't necessarily faster.  If you
have a slow printer CPU (face it, they don't put alpha or pentium
cores in these things; the best might be an i960) and a fast but
mostly idle desktop CPU, then you might as well do the rendering on
the host CPU.  But modern Postscript printers usually have fast enough
CPUs that the mechanical limits form most of the bottleneck...

Here are the color inkjet printers known to work perfectly with the
usual Linux software.  Note that working perfectly may not include
non-printing functions; for example to load ink into some canon bjc
printers you need a special program (which is, fwiw, available as
shareware for Linux).

make   |model           
=======+================
Canon  |BJC-210         
Canon  |BJC-240         
Canon  |BJC-250         
Canon  |BJC-4000        
Canon  |BJC-4100        
Canon  |BJC-4200        
Canon  |BJC-4300        
Canon  |BJC-4400        
Canon  |BJC-610         
Canon  |BJC-620         
Canon  |BJC-70          
Canon  |BJC-800         
Epson  |Stylus Color    
Epson  |Stylus Color 400
Epson  |Stylus Color 500
Epson  |Stylus Color 600
Epson  |Stylus Color 850
Epson  |Stylus Color II 
Epson  |Stylus Color IIs
Epson  |Stylus Pro XL   
HP     |2000Cse         
HP     |2500C           
HP     |DesignJet 650C  
HP     |DeskJet 1200C   
HP     |DeskJet 1600C   
HP     |DeskJet 1600Cm  
HP     |DeskJet 400     
HP     |DeskJet 420C    
HP     |DeskJet 550C    
HP     |DeskJet 600     
HP     |DeskJet 660Cse  
HP     |DeskJet 690C    
HP     |DeskJet 850C    
HP     |DeskJet 855C    
HP     |DeskJet 870     
HP     |DeskJet 870Cxi  
HP     |DeskJet 890     
HP     |PaintJet XL300  
IBM    |Jetprinter 3852 
Lexmark|Optra Color 40  
Lexmark|Optra Color 45  
(41 rows)



-- 
Grant Taylor - gtaylor@picante<dot>com - http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/
 Cellphone information: http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/cell/
 Libretto information:  http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/portable/
 Linux Printing HOWTO:  http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/pht/

------------------------------

Date: Mon, 01 Mar 1999 13:17:36 -0500
From: Andrew Comech <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Add another HD causes boot faiure

Andries Brouwer wrote:
> 
> "Aaron Dershem" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> : I tried to add a second HD to my machine (using linuxconf in X), but it
> : failed on me.  Then when I rebooted, it went into maintenance mode (RH 5.2).
> : I had to vi the fstab to get rid of the /dev/hdb1 entry to get my machine to
> : reboot properly.  What did I do wrong?  Should I use fdisk?  If so, how do I
> : format the partition that was created?
> 
> : I need a little bit of steering, please.

Hope you are already in the air, but just in case:

How do you add the second disk? secondary master (hdc) or primary slave
(hdb)?
Depending on this, you (may?) also need to jumper-configure the hard
drive
to respond as a master or slave.... 

Cheers,
Andrew

------------------------------

From: "TURBO1010" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: advice sought for linux & fujitsu c350 lifebook
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 15:00:02 -0800

Tried redhat 5.1, and Caldera Standard 1.2, the install went fine, even got
the ethernet card working, just couldn't get X to display in full screen.  I
picked the right server, and neomagic chip, but I just couldn't get it to
go.  Now since I'm have 1.3, that might go in, but I still have to try it.


Jacob lbaltuch wrote in message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Hello:
>
>I've just bought a Fujitus C350 Lifebook and I'd like to know if
>anyone reading this is running some (and which) flavor of Linux
>on that piece of hardware.
>
>Could you please answer in email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]?
>
>Cheers,
>Jacob
>




------------------------------

From: "Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: SCSI timeouts on all three channels?
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 22:04:03 -0000
Reply-To: "Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Hi,
    The fact that it is timing out on all three channels means it is almost
certainly a termination issue.  How have you terminated the devices ? you do
not say.  The ends of the SCSI chain should be terminated, usually, the SCSI
card will be at one end, and terminated internally.  The device at the other
end of the chain must either be a self terminating device, or must have an
externel terminator.  If the final device is self terminating, ensure that
the cable goes to the in port, thes devices are usually only terminated on
the out side, so getting the connections the wrong way around causes the bus
not to be terminated.

Hope this helps.

    Martin

root wrote in message <7becqh$bu9$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>I recently switched motherboards in a machine, all of a sudden, I
>start to run into SCSI Timeout errors on all three channels, I figure
>that timeouts on ONE channel is likely a termination issue, can this
>also be a termination issue?  Thanks for any pointers ....
>
>Machine: PPro 200 x2, 32 x8 =256 MB Parity RAM (4-way interleaved)
> SuperMicro P6DOF MB (Orion chipset), NE2000 clone ISA NIC.
> AHA-3985 3-channel SCSI controller.  SB compatible sound.
>
> Channel A: #0 Seagate Barracuda 4GB
>    #5 Plextor UltraPlex 14x/32x CD-ROM
>    #6 Fujitsu M2501A 230MB MO drive.
> Channel B: #2 Seagate Hawk 2GB
> Channel C: #3 Seagate Hawk 4GB SCA with SCA-50 adapter
>    #4 Ricoh M6201S 6x/2x CD-RW
>
>System: Red Hat 5.1, kernels 2.1.127, 2.1.131ac2, 2.2.1, 2.2.2
>
>



------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Paul Sian)
Subject: Will rage 128 be supported?
Date: Mon, 01 Mar 1999 12:49:32 -0500

Does anyone know if the new ATI Rage 128 will be a supported card under linux?
Thanks

-- 
Please remove -NOSPAM to reply via email.

------------------------------

From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Soundblater 16
Date: 1 Mar 1999 23:15:23 GMT

Just following up to my own article here with some later developments...

> When I upgraded to a 2.2.1 kernel the recording fell to bits!
> I can still get perfectly good playback and I can still do reasonable
> 8 bit recording but as soon as I crank it up to 16 bit stereo at 44.1k
> the sound quality gets really really bad, barely recognisable.

Some of this was my fault because I let the mic batteries get low
(make Homer Simpson noise here) but even with brand new batteries
the off-the-shelf 2.2.2 kernel (yup I put the patch through too)
still gives a lot of noise on 44.1k recording (for me at least,
Vibra16C soundcard, Cyrix CPU).

I pushed on and downloaded the ALSA drivers from http://alsa.jcu.cz/
and tried my original recording software using the OSS compatability
features -- sound was much the same -- poor.

I did finally put together a recording program using the native
ALSA library API and found that the result was much better.
There are a few fiddle factors involved such as buffer fragment size
and the number of read ahead fragments so I probably haven't found
the perfect setup with ALSA but I am at least getting decent results
out os a 2.2.2 kernel.

> I have tried various interrupts for the soundcard (I'm using isapnp
> to force the soundcard to the interrupts that I choose) and they all
> do the same thing.

Haven't yet tried all the interrupt combinations and priority tuning
with the ALSA drivers either. I do like the fact that ALSA documentation
is almost up to date and MUCH more detailed than OSS documentation.

        - Tel


------------------------------

From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Small pump for liquid cooling...
Date: 1 Mar 1999 23:24:25 GMT

In comp.os.linux.hardware douglas shawhan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am scouting around for a small dc pump for a liquid-cooled cpu project.
> The water jacket and radiator are trivial to build... but most fishtank
> pumps are too big and don't like to have their speed varied.. 8-/
>  
> Any sources? My linux box begs for this useless add-on!

I've noticed that a lot of CPU installers don't bother with heat-sink
compound between the CPU top and the heat sink. I would expect that a
smear of this would give an immediate cooling effect for almost no
effort (maybe the surface-to-surface contact is so accurate with modern
components that the compound is not going to help, seems unlikely).

        - Tel

------------------------------

From: "J�rgen Exner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: running executable from cdrom?
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 11:00:15 -0800

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message <7bcl99$8rp$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Hi there. I just burned my first cd. I used mkisofs to make the disk image,
>and that program gives all files root group and user ownership. That
>shouldn't be a problem, but anyway, when I mount the cd and try to run a
>program which has these permissions: '-r-xr-xr-x  1 root  root', I still
get
>a Permission denied error. Does anyone know why this is the case? Thanks
for
>any info. BTW, this is how I mount it (from my fstab):
>
>/dev/cdrom              /cdrom                  iso9660 noauto,ro,user  0 0


I may be wrong but I believe the option "user" implies the option "noexec"
(which ususally is a good idea). Please check the man pages for mount(8) and
fstab, it should be mentioned there somewhere.

Try re-enabling "exec" and be careful not to enable "suid" (for obvious
security issues).

jue
--
J�rgen Exner




------------------------------

From: "James Breitinger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: CD-ROM Problems, Philips CM206
Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 22:57:04 -0800

SOmeone pls help.  I've tried to install Redhat Linux 5.0, 5.1, and 5.2
using a proprietary Philips Cm206 CD drive on an old 486 box.  According to
documentation, this drive is supported during install.  It is not
automatically found, but is on the list of supported drives yet when I enter
the correct parameters "Cm206=0x300,11" for base memory adr and IRQ it still
cannot find the drive.  Accordingly, I have not had any success in
installation.  Any help or tricks I'm missing would be greatly appreciated.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



------------------------------

From: Snoop Baron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Need printer sugestions! :-)
Date: Mon, 01 Mar 1999 12:21:26 -0600

Thanks! Just what I was looking for :).

Fernando
-- 
Snoop Baron -- on the web -- at  http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/baron/

------------------------------

From: William Cherry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Laptop suspend *not*on*disk* ?
Date: 01 Mar 1999 13:13:07 -0600

Eric GAUDET <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Hi,
> I have linux 2.2.1 (redhat 5.2 upgraded) running great on my laptop with
> afterstep. I have a suspend/resume button on my laptop, but when I use
> it under linux, I can't resume : everything is frozen, I can't even move
> the mouse or ctrl-alt-del the machine : I have to switch it off. 
> It doesn't seem to be the apmd suspend to disk feature, nor a bios
> suspend to disk, but a suspend "in ram", thus consuming some power.
> Does anybody nows hows to deal with that ?
> 
> Eric


This may be a silly question, but did you re-compile the kernel
so that it has APM support compiled in (this is turned off by default)?
When I first set up Linux on my laptop, I did not compile my own kernel,
and suspend to disk worked fine (except that the real time clock didn't
get set correctly when I resumed), and the RAM suspend behaved as you
describe.  After re-compiling the kernel to include APM support,
everything worked great.

------------------------------

From: Jose Urena <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Zoom modem and Linux
Date: Mon, 01 Mar 1999 14:13:41 -0500

What is your UART number?
Have you been able to connect at higher speed using any other OS and the same
computer?
You mentioned that you have at least 2 systems, are they using the same phone
line?
If you move the modem to the other computer, can you make a v90 connection?
Are you using the latest modem microcode?

1. Consider that you need to have a 16550 UART to connect reliable at high
speeds
2. if you can connect using other OSs in that machine, then your problem might
be local to linux
3. if you have the other computer connected to the same phone line and using the
other computer you are able to connect at speeds >28.8Kb, then you problem could
be local to the machine connection upto your phone jack

"Jonathan D. Oman" wrote:

> I have two external Zoom modems.  One is the V.34X Plus, and the new one is
> the 56k DualMode.  The V.34X has worked well with Slackware 3.6 / Kernal
> 2.0.35.  The problem is the 56k DualMode modem.  It never gets into 56k mode
> with Linux.  It always drops down to V.34 mode.  I know that the system I am
> calling supports 56k, because I have another system with a Win95 OS that has
> no problems connecting at 46kb or even 48kb.
>
> I have tried all of the suggestions in the howto's.  Including "setserial
> /dev/cua1 spd_vhi", and "stty crtscts < /dev/cua1".  I have tried many
> combinations of the AT commands without success.  The fastest I have been
> able to connect is 26kb.  More often than not, it connects at 12kb!
>
> Has anyone successfully used this Zoom 56k modem with Linux, at high speed?
>
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks, Jon Oman


------------------------------

From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Does Cyrix support linux
Date: 1 Mar 1999 23:32:30 GMT

I'm wondering how many Cyrix users fiddle with the flags using set686.
I don't know too much about what they do but with my old 120MHz Cyrix
I always set the power-saving flag and there was a really noticable
temperature difference. This was under kernel 2.0.34 and it was perfectly
stable.

With my new Cyrix (200MHz with MX I think) it runs stable without the
set686 fiddle but sometimes hangs the kernel after a few days when I
try to set the power saving mode using set686 (it crashed under 2.0.34
but I haven't had the courage to try set686 under 2.2.2 yet).

Does anyone know what the `best' set686 settings are for Cyrix CPUs
under Linux. Does anyone even fully understand what the settings do
in a Linux context?

In comp.os.linux.hardware Mark Hollett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm running a Cyrix 180 MediaGX.  the only problem I had was with X, the
> 3.3.3 version of the server now supports mediaGX.

> Sun Jong Kwoun wrote:
> > 
> > then how about Cyrix MediaGX MMX 233MHz?
> > thanks
> > 
> > Sander Dol wrote:
> > 
> > > Yes!!
> > > I run it happily on a Cx86200MhzMMX without ANY problem!!
> > > The latest kernel even let you specify this processortype.
> > >
> > > Regards,
> > > Sander
> > >
> > > Kishore wrote:
> > >
> > > > Hi Folks,
> > > >
> > > > I fear,
> > > >
> > > > And Is it easy to load on Cyrix does it have any problems?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks for the input.
> > > >
> > > > -Kishore
> > > >
> > > > ------------------  Posted via SearchLinux  ------------------
> > > >                   http://www.searchlinux.com

------------------------------

From: Grant Taylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: laser printer for linux
Date: 23 Feb 1999 11:45:48 -0500

rob <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> I am looking or an inexpensive new laser printer (~300) that will
> work with linux.  Most of the hardware compatibility lists seem to
> contain slightly older items.

Have you tried the new list at the Printing HOWTO home page?  There
are a number of Brother, HP, and Okidata models that are known to
work.  There are also Xerox and Lexmark lasers, although most of those
are probably more expensive.

The biggest series to avoid is probably the NEC SuperScript, none of
which work perfectly.

The whole list lives in (as yet undistributed) recent Printing HOWTOs
and online at http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/pht/printer_list.cgi
Please add any printers you find to work (or not work) that aren't
listed.

> I'm a bit discouraged because the 'top rated' printers s are often
> windows only, and the mfr's don't seem to putcompatibility or
> emulation data on their websites.

Here's a handy summary of all the perfectly working bw laser/LED
printers in my database:

make   |model         
=======+==============
Brother|HL-1050       
Brother|HL-660        
Brother|HL-720        
Brother|HL-760        
Canon  |LBP-8II       
Canon  |LIPS-III      
Epson  |LP 8000       
HP     |LaserJet 1100 
HP     |LaserJet 2100 
HP     |LaserJet 2100M
HP     |LaserJet 4000N
HP     |LaserJet 4L   
HP     |LaserJet 5    
HP     |LaserJet 5L   
HP     |LaserJet 5MP  
HP     |LaserJet 6L   
Lexmark|Optra E       
Lexmark|Optra E+      
Lexmark|Optra S 1250  
Okidata|OL 410e       
Okidata|OL 610e/PS    
Okidata|Okipage 6e    
Okidata|Okipage 6ex   
Ricoh  |4801          
Ricoh  |6000          
Xerox  |DocuPrint N17 
Xerox  |DocuPrint N32 
(27 rows)

-- 
Grant Taylor - gtaylor@picante<dot>com - http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/
 Cellphone information: http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/cell/
 Libretto information:  http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/portable/
 Linux Printing HOWTO:  http://www.picante.com/~gtaylor/pht/

------------------------------


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