Linux-Hardware Digest #49, Volume #10 Sat, 17 Apr 99 02:13:34 EDT
Contents:
Re: Sound Blaster only works for WAVs? not Mp3 or MIDI? (David Ripton)
Re: Ideal Linux Box? (WORLOK)
Re: Dual Processing with Celeron Processors (BL)
Re: ES 1371 on Intel 440BX motherboard (David Ripton)
RE: Minimum Hardware For Ghostscript on Linux ("Donald R. Brewer")
Re: ESS1869 Soundcard (David Ripton)
Graphics card compatibility??? (Shymon Shlafman)
Re: Winmodems And Linux. (Bob Martin)
Re: Hang up with Adaptec 2940U2W ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Graphics card compatibility??? (jedi)
Re: Ideal Linux Box? (HAC)
only 2 of my joystick buttons work (*MoNsTeR*)
Re: easy-to-configure soundcard (Peter Pawlowski)
non-edo memory where, how much? (oak)
Re: ATI Rage Fury (Gianni Mariani)
Re: How to install cheapest X Terminal for every room?? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: LS-120 drive and Linux (Eric Hesselberg)
Re: Redhat driver for linksys ethernet cards. ("Eric Paulson")
Pacific CommWare board / 16750 ? ("Clifton T. Sharp Jr.")
Which scsi controller? (Eric Hesselberg)
Re: non-edo memory where, how much? ("James Kosin")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Ripton)
Subject: Re: Sound Blaster only works for WAVs? not Mp3 or MIDI?
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 22:49:36 GMT
In article <7er1no$52a$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hello, I just installed a Sound Blaster 16 card. It works only to play WAV
>sound files. It wont play CD's(probably beucase I didnt connect the cd-rom to
>the card : ). Is there a way around this? Becuase the wire doesnt fit, so i
>can't conenct it). When I try to play an MP3 or a MIDI, the sound card stops
>working. I have to reboot to get it to work again. Why would this be?
I've seen CD audio cables that have three different connectors on the
sound card end, to cover all the bases. Find one.
You probably have the MIDI address set wrong. If it's at 0x330, try
0x300, or vice-versa. If you have a proper SB16 with jumpers, setting
things up the way you want is easy. If you have a PnP version, it's
a pain, but look for a midi line in your /etc/conf.modules (You've
got wav files playing, so you're past the hard part.)
Try another MP3 player. (X11amp works well with my SB16, while the
other one I tried didn't work at all.) If that's not it, then possibly
you have the 8-bit DMA address set right and the 16-bit DMA address set
wrong or something.
Good luck.
--
David Ripton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
spamgard(tm): To email me, put "geek" in your Subject line.
------------------------------
From: WORLOK <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Ideal Linux Box?
Date: Sat, 17 Apr 1999 02:52:58 GMT
RH 5.2/ kernel 2.2.5
KDE 1.1 / WindowMaker 0.21
Celeron 300a OC 450mhz
128 MB PC100
6.4gb Maxtor UDMA
Zoom 56k isa modem
Adaptec AHA 1542CP ISA
Acer 40X UDMA CDROM
HP Surestore IDE CDRW
Hercules Stingray 128/3D Voodoo PCI graphics
Creative AWE32 ISA sound
17" MAG DX17f
UMAX Astra 1200s SCSi scanner (SANE)
WangDAT 8gb 4mm DDS2 SCSI ext Tape
SCSi ZIP drive
ext Conner 2GB SCSI hdd
Logitech 3 button Marble trackball
Works pretty good for my home system. I added the scsi tape recently. What a
Godsend!
Your choices seem fine. Linux flies on new hardware.
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Craig M Lambert) wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm about to build myself a new Linux box and wanted some feedback
> about the hardware I have selected for it. (I am going to use Caldera
> 1.3 in it).
>
> Motherboard: Asus P5A (rev 1.0.4) [Dabs Direct] socket 7/
> Asus P5S-vm (as long as AMD K7 can be
> supported)
>
> CPU: AMD K6-3/K7 (when it comes out) 450-500mhz
>
> Ram: 128mb SDRAM PC100
>
> Hard drive: large UDMA > 10gb (not sure what make)
>
> Graphics card: AGP possibly ATI xpert 98/99 or ATI Xpert @
> work 8/12mb (must be compatible with Linux)
>
> CDROM: >=40x IDE (possibly Panasonic/Creative - compatible
> with Linux)
>
> Floppy disk: Generic
>
> Mouse: 3 button Microsoft - serial port
>
> Keyboard: win 95 (104)
>
> Box: ATX power supply, with 2, 5.25" drive
> bays and 2, 3.5" bays
>
> Printer: Epson colour 640
>
> Soundcard: Creative labs PCI (16bit)
>
> Tv card: Hauppage/ati compat.-(connects with graphics
> card)
>
> The other hardware such as the monitor and modem, I already have.
>
> Thanks for any help
>
> Craig
>
--
===============================
Windoze NT has crashed,
I am the Blue Screen of Death,
No one hears your screams...
============= Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ============
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
------------------------------
From: BL <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Dual Processing with Celeron Processors
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 23:37:56 GMT
cdog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: http://kikumaru.w-w.ne.jp/pc/celeron/index_e.html
: This is the site that started it all. By the man who let us stick it the
: MAN.
: Running a ASUS P2BD w/ dual 300A's @ 450MHz for 3 months now without a
: crash.
about 2 months here. been up and running since I first drilled the celery
holes ;-)
(GREAT price/performance - if you can still find the 300a chips around)
: Dwayne McGarty wrote:
: > I see people reference the fact that they have dual processor
: > linux boxes with *modified* celeron processors. Can any one
: > provide an description/url that describes the modifications
: > required
: > and why it is necessary.
: >
: > I am presently looking to purchase such a setup so success and
: > horror
: > stories welcome...
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Ripton)
Subject: Re: ES 1371 on Intel 440BX motherboard
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 23:37:41 GMT
In article <7eunu4$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Steffen Kluge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>Harry McGregor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>The AudioPCI (ES1370 and 1371) is a very good card. Get the
>>2.2.5 kernel, compile it, and it runs great.
>
>Why do you think it's very good? Honest question - I'm curious.
>
>My experience with the AudioPCI (a.k.a. SoundBlaster PCI) card
>was a bit mixed: it doesn't have an amplifier on-board, so you
>can't connect passive speakers to it. This sets it apart from
>other (orig. Creative) SoundBlaster cards. In fact, the Creative
>passive speakers (SBS10) claim to work well with all SB cards,
>but they don't with the SB PCI.
I can't imagine wanting to actually use the amplifier in a SB
card. The things are staticky enough at line level. And
even $20 powered speakers have better amps.
>Also, the card doesn't support the ul format directly. That
>means you can't drop .au files onto the /dev/dsp or /dev/audio
>devices. Some apps depend on that. You have to use something
>like sox in between to convert into ub format.
That is a definite drawback.
Still, I consider the ~$30 I spent on an OEM Creative Ensoniq
Soundblaster AudioPCI (or whatever it was called that month)
to be a great deal. The thing has pretty clean digital audio,
unlike all previous Creative cards. It has a decent default
MIDI patch set, unlike all previous Creative cards. You get
the idea that someone other than Creative designed it. :->
The only complaint I have is occasional sound outages during
Heroes of Might and Magic 3, and I can't say for sure that
they're the card's fault rather than the game's or general
Windows / DirectX problems. (I guess I should swap in an old
SB16 or SBPro and see if that fixes things.)
--
David Ripton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
spamgard(tm): To email me, put "geek" in your Subject line.
------------------------------
From: "Donald R. Brewer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: Minimum Hardware For Ghostscript on Linux
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 15:44:32 -0700
Does anyone know what the minimum processor and memory requirements would be
to run Ghostscript on Linux?
For example if you run Ghostscript on Linux running on an embedded 386, what
would be the mimimum memory requirements.
Thanks,
Carlos
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (David Ripton)
Subject: Re: ESS1869 Soundcard
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 22:57:15 GMT
In article <7f0ph3$ja2$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Mige <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Can anyone help me to configure my ESS1869 soundcard?
RedHat's sndconfig did the trick for me. Pick ESS1868; it's close
enough. Mine works except for MIDI; I'll get around to figuring
that out one of these days.
--
David Ripton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
spamgard(tm): To email me, put "geek" in your Subject line.
------------------------------
From: Shymon Shlafman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Graphics card compatibility???
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 13:23:24 +0200
Hello, Linux people!!!
I'm going to buy for my Pentium-166MMX the following graphic card:
ATI Xpert98 PCI (8MB,RagePro).
Please, answer ( if anyone knows ) if Linux supports this card.
I'll appreciate your answers.
Bye,
Shymon
P.S.: Please, send answers to my E-mail.
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 22:56:42 -0500
From: Bob Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Winmodems And Linux.
There is a project starting to develop a winmodem driver for linux but that
is a long way off. For now inmodems do not work with linux.
KrOnZ wrote:
> Here are my specs: RedHat 5.2, U.S. Robotics 56K Internal Winmodem ISA.
>
> Does anyone know any way i can get my Winmodem to work in linux? I'm
> new to linux and most people are telling me that there might be a way,
> Please Help Me..
>
> If you can help e-mail me at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Hang up with Adaptec 2940U2W
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 17 Apr 1999 03:57:19 GMT
In comp.os.linux.hardware Juan Ignacio Codo�er Bragado
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
: Hi,
:
:
: I have a server with:
:
: 2 P-II.
: 4 HD 9Gb. Ultra Wide Scsi 2 : 80Mb/seg.
:
: 1 Adaptec 2940U2W
:
: I have installed RH 5.2 with kernel 2.2.5 and all work fine.
:
: The problem come when we move a big file from ftp, CD or from disk to
: disk. suddenly, the system make a bep, switch on the diskette unit's
: led and hang up.
been there seen that.
I have a PII with an Adaptec 2940U2W, IBM DDRS-34560D 4GB lvd disk and
a Yamaha CRW4416S. RH5.2 with kernel 2.2.5.
Whenever I use mkisofs to access the cdr the scsi bus reset after a while.
I've posted a few times on this but never had *any* hint on what was
the problem. ;(
I've played with tag queuing, disabling it totally on all scsi devices
then on some, played with parity and block six\ze jumpers on the CDRW, etc,
but got nothing. I'm stumped.
If you ever find anything, please drop me a line.
jf
--
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away."
- Phillip K. Dick
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (jedi)
Subject: Re: Graphics card compatibility???
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 16:39:03 -0700
On Fri, 16 Apr 1999 13:39:28 +0200, Shymon Shlafman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Hello, Linux people!!!
>
>I'm going to buy for my Pentium-166MMX the following graphic card:
> ATI Xpert98 PCI (8MB,RagePro).
Get an 8M Matrox G200 or Banshee/Voodoo3 instead.
>
>Please, answer ( if anyone knows ) if Linux supports this card.
>I'll appreciate your answers.
>
>Bye,
>
>Shymon
>
>P.S.: Please, send answers to my E-mail.
>
>
>
--
"I was not elected to watch my people suffer and die |||
while you discuss this invasion in committe." / | \
In search of sane PPP docs? Try http://penguin.lvcm.com
------------------------------
From: HAC <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Ideal Linux Box?
Date: Sat, 17 Apr 1999 04:15:13 GMT
Craig M Lambert wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm about to build myself a new Linux box and wanted some feedback
> about the hardware I have selected for it. (I am going to use Caldera
> 1.3 in it).
>
> Motherboard: Asus P5A (rev 1.0.4) [Dabs Direct] socket 7/
> Asus P5S-vm (as long as AMD K7 can be
> supported)
>
> CPU: AMD K6-3/K7 (when it comes out) 450-500mhz
>
> Ram: 128mb SDRAM PC100
>
Other than being made by AMD, the K7 has no relationship to the K6. The
K7 is NOT Socket 7. I'm not sure what type of memory the K7 will use,
and would suggest that you consider the motherboard, processor, and
memory as a single item for upgrade purposes. Buy it all now. If you
can't afford to, then put your money into memory rather than a faster
processor. Look at the prices for older processors and memory, such as
EDO SIMMS, and you will see that if you wait too long, the prices go way
up as the market moves on. PC100 SDRAM won't be around forever.
> Hard drive: large UDMA > 10gb (not sure what make)
>
I recently installed an IBM-DTTA-351010 (10GP), and am very happy with
it. The 5400 RPM spindle rate keeps the price, noise, and heat down,
but the performance is pretty good. This model is 10.1GB; there are
6.4GB, 8.4GB, 13.5GB, and 16.8GB versions. The difference in price is
too small to make the 6.4GB worth buying, unless you have some other
reason to limit the size.
--
Howard Christeller Irvine, CA [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: *MoNsTeR* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: only 2 of my joystick buttons work
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 20:44:50 -0700
I just bought a "Performance Propad 6" (hey, it was $10), and I'm trying
to get it to work right in Linux. I compiled in the joystick driver no
problem, and programs can use the joystick, except that only two of it's
6 buttons are recognized. The joystick.txt file in the kernel source
said to specify a bitmask on the module command line to inform the
driver of how many buttons I have, but if I specify any options to
insmod, it just sits there and never gets the module in, and modprobe
seems to simply ignore them.
Any ideas?
misc info:
the pad has two axes and 6 buttons
I'm running kernel 2.2.5
I'm not a newbie :)
--
*MoNsTeR*
KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(headers may be bogus)
------------------------------
From: Peter Pawlowski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: easy-to-configure soundcard
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 20:13:45 -0500
I installed a normal SB16 without any problem.
Arun Muthukumaran wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Could anyone please suggest an easy-to-install,
> not-so-expensive-yet-good sound card.... I know I'm asking for too much!
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
> Arun.
--
*************************************
"By Quantumn Theroy, if you have a finite amount
of people working for an infinite amount of time, writing
random code, eventually you'll get a working OS. Microsoft
must of gotten lucky."
*************************************
------------------------------
From: oak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: non-edo memory where, how much?
Date: Sat, 17 Apr 1999 01:15:56 GMT
I have an old 486DX2 that I need memory for. I'm pretty sure it's non-edo
because it's so old so I'd like to know where I can get this sort of memory
and how much it would cost. Is it worth buying non-edo memory or will it cost
the same werer I to buy a new motherboard and buy less expensive edo memory?
Also, on this type of machine would it be parity
or non-parity? How to tell - is it on the chip?
How could I tell how many pins it is? count them? measure?
Lot of questions eh?
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks!
-Tony
------------------------------
From: Gianni Mariani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: ATI Rage Fury
Date: Sat, 17 Apr 1999 03:39:24 GMT
WWWait ...
ATI has agreed to help with the Linux TV Tuner project. They are friends and
can be made to co-operate. Just make it politely known that ATI should help.
If you want ATI Rage Fury help, I'd contact the maintainers of XFree86 and see
what you can do to get ATI support.
How about somthing like:
ATI, I will buy 3 Rage Fury boards if you have Linux support (including 3D Gfx
Acceleration and MPEG Decode) within 3 months. (I probably would actually).
Andreas Spengler wrote:
> Hi Jeremy,
>
> Jeremy Shinall wrote:
>
> > Greetings!
> >
> > I just installed Red Hat 5.2 on my system running at 374MHz (Celeron
> > 300A overclocked using 4.5 x 83MHz). I have an ATI Rage Fury AGP video
> > running the Rage 128GL chipset with 32 MB RAM. RH installed just fine,
> > but when I type 'startx' the screen blinks then returns an error that no
> > screens were found. I've tried just about EVERY setting in Xconfigurator
> > for the type of card, chipset, and whether to probe or not. Nothing
> > helps. Any ideas?
> >
>
> Bad luck.
>
> this Chipset isn�t supported under X yet. ATI is no friend of Linux.... ;-(
>
> Greetings,
>
> Andreas Spengler
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.x
Subject: Re: How to install cheapest X Terminal for every room??
Date: Sat, 17 Apr 1999 01:54:11 GMT
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I am starting a home automation project, and I am thinking of having a
> computer installed in every room. The perfect solution is for all these
> to be X Terminals which are diskless and connects to the main server in
> the closet. What is the cheapest and easiest way to do this?? I will
> probably need sound capability so I can route voice messages etc.
>
> I just saw someone in another newsgroup selling HP Enzivex X-Terminals
> for $150CND, will they be useful??
I would go with cheap PC's running Linux or *BSD for the following reasons:
* If you ever decide that that was a dumb idea, you can yank and re-sell or
re-use them.
* If you find you need more capabilities (e.g. you need 100baseT for that
real-time video you're pumping out to the dining room from the guest bedroom),
you will need to be able to upgrade the hardware.
* Cheap PCs are.... well, cheap (a $500 system from 6 months ago resells
around $150-$200, and has more nads under Linux or *BSD than your livingroom
is likely to need for some time).
* You'll probably want a flat-panel display in at least ONE room.
* Sound is more readily available.
* I've never seen a beowulf-based house ;-)
-AJS
============= Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ============
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 21:03:46 +0000
From: Eric Hesselberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: LS-120 drive and Linux
Vaughan Hider wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> I am planning an install of Red Hat 5.2 and are wanting to know if LS-120
> drives are compatible with linux.
>
> Thanks
> Vaughan
Works great here under 2.0.36 or 2.2.X. It shows up as another drive.
Mine is hdc, just mount it as a floppy.
Good luck.
Eric Hesselberg
------------------------------
From: "Eric Paulson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.misc,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Redhat driver for linksys ethernet cards.
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 21:07:03 -0500
I used the 'tulip' drivers for my Linksys EtherFast cards in RH5.2 as per
the Linksys website. Works great!
Eric
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:7f8ktf$spg$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Hello,
>
> Thanks for the message. Linksys does support Linux too.
> What I'd like to know is whether it supports Redhat?
> Please dont go "duh!!??".. I'm new to linux. I'm assuming
> redhat is a different flavor of linux.
>
> Please also email your replies.
>
> Thanks a bunch,
> Rajesh.
>
> In article <Pine.LNX.4.10.9904141625180.4695-100000@cc1022626-
> a.owml1.md.home.com>,
> "ne..." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Apr 14, 1999 at 18:37, [EMAIL PROTECTED] eloquently wrote:
> >
> > >Hello everyone!
> > >
> > >Me and a friend have just ordered a couple of PCs and
> > >plan to load the Redhat linux on it... planning to dive
> > >into the linux world.
> > >
> > >I am planning to buy the Linksys, fast ethernet starter kit.
> > >wanted to know if redhat has a driver for the fast ethernet cards
> > >from linksys...
> > Some nics from Linksys are supported. Check out which
> > models you will be getting, then visit the LDP page for
> > the Ethernet-HOWTO to see whether the card is supported.
> > You might also want to check the Linksys homepage for
> > Linux support.
> >
> > --
> > Anybody who doesn't cut his speed at the sight of a police car is
> > probably parked.
> >
> >
>
> -----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
> http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
------------------------------
From: "Clifton T. Sharp Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Pacific CommWare board / 16750 ?
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 21:07:38 -0500
Anyone know of support for the "Pacific CommWare Turbo Express 921.6 Kbs
Serial I/O Adapter", or generic 16750 support?
--
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
| Cliff Sharp | Whatever it is that hits the fan, |
| WA9PDM | it will not be distributed evenly. |
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 21:10:29 +0000
From: Eric Hesselberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Which scsi controller?
Can anybody suggest a good scsi controller? Just looking for a good
ultra wide controller. Thanks
Eric Hesselberg
------------------------------
From: "James Kosin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: non-edo memory where, how much?
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1999 22:01:27 -0400
Dear oak,
Buy a NEW motherboard and new memory!
Memory for that line of systems may be able to find at secondhand and pawn
shops maybe.
The memory is still very expensive for that type of system. 30pin SIMM and
you probably have 1M SIMMs installed and either need another 4 1M SIMMs or
go the very expensive route and get 4 4M SIMMs...
Just save your money and buy a NEW motherboard, CPU and memory.
Just my long 2 cents,
James Kosin
oak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:ghRR2.302$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I have an old 486DX2 that I need memory for. I'm pretty sure it's non-edo
> because it's so old so I'd like to know where I can get this sort of
memory
> and how much it would cost. Is it worth buying non-edo memory or will it
cost
> the same werer I to buy a new motherboard and buy less expensive edo
memory?
> Also, on this type of machine would it be parity
> or non-parity? How to tell - is it on the chip?
> How could I tell how many pins it is? count them? measure?
> Lot of questions eh?
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks!
>
> -Tony
------------------------------
** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **
The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:
Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.hardware) via:
Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites:
ftp.funet.fi pub/Linux
tsx-11.mit.edu pub/linux
sunsite.unc.edu pub/Linux
End of Linux-Hardware Digest
******************************