Linux-Hardware Digest #225, Volume #10 Thu, 13 May 99 12:13:36 EDT
Contents:
Re: Installing SB16 (Justin The Cynical)
QIC Tape Drives (Eric Gillespie, Jr.)
Re: CD-RW's for Linux (Swietanowski Artur)
Re: recommend server hardware for 2.2.5 (Tim Moore)
Re: IDE-Harddisk problem (Tim Moore)
Re: Nvidia Riva TNT AGP card ? (Tim Moore)
Re: LINUX and AMD K6-3D NOW, ANY PROBLEM? (Ramon Huerta)
Re: GLIB,GTK+ and GIMP (scanner setup) (James R. Van Zandt)
Re: List of multiport Ethernet cards supported. (Tim Moore)
Creative/Ensoniq 1373 integrated Sound Drivers ("Kid Charlemagne")
Ataptec AVA 1502AP not detected ("Klaus Weiler")
Seagate Ultra ATA disks ("jonjon")
Re: All the current OSes are idiotic (was Re: Is Windows for idiots?) (westprog)
Re: Newbie humble Q: can't run autoboot.bat at D:\ (Zeljko Cvrkotic)
Re: linux not supporting my Network card? ("Walter Harms")
HELP ASUS P2B-F (Gaetano Bellanca)
Re: SCSI Problem (Pierre Asselin)
Re: All the current OSes are idiotic (was Re: Is Windows for idiots?) (Chris
Sherlock)
cobalt raq q (Direct Connect)
Re: Is there a 3D video card... (mj)
Re: Digital HiNote 2000 & Caldera OpenLinux 2.2 Setup ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Video card MATROX ULTIMA/IMPRESSION ("fr�d�ric morini�re")
Re: Linux dials modem but Browsers can't find it? ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Justin The Cynical)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Installing SB16
Date: 13 May 1999 10:27:17 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 11 May 1999 13:48:12 +0200, Alper Oezmacun <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
->Hi
->
->I have an older Soundblaster 16, I think whitout pnp.
->How can I install it?? Im using Suse 6.0 and the way the manual
->describes it is only for pnp.
Easy. If it's not 'plug and pray', jumper it for IRQ and DMA settings
that are not in use on your system, turn off the machine, plug it in, and
compile the sound support in the kernel, feeding it the IRQ and DMA's that you
jumpered the card for. Install the new kernel, and reboot. Watch for the
init messages from the kernel. If all goes well, enjoy the sounds.
--
"So does the Leatherman Micra. It has tweezers too but I find that I need
the pliers on the SuperTool in order to deal adequately with my nasal hair."
- Giles Todd, Monk
Justin The Cynical, Bastard of Smaug - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Eric Gillespie, Jr.)
Subject: QIC Tape Drives
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 07:43:39 GMT
I need to buy a tape drive for backup, and I'm looking at buying a
1360MB QIC cartridge drive, floppy interface, from CDW. Before coming
to this decision, I searched dejanews.com for advice on tape drives,
and didn't come up with much information. I did see that someone said
to stay away from QIC drives.
How's my choice? Does it work well with Linux (Debian 2.1, Linux 2.0.36)?
Are there any hardware problems?
--
Eric Gillespie, Jr. <*> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Don't you try to out-weird me! I get stranger things
than you free with my breakfast cereal!
--Zaphod Beeblebrox
------------------------------
From: Swietanowski Artur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: CD-RW's for Linux
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 13:22:59 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The primary advantage of of the CD-RW is that you can read it is just
> about any CDROM drive.
You can read a CD-R in normal CD-ROM's, but not a CD-RW. I don't
think I even saw a CD-ROM capable of reading a CD-RW.
> Personally, I expect DVD-RAM to make the MO drives obsolete in the
> next year or so.
So would I (maybe I'd make it two years). But when DVD-RAM takes
over, the CD-RW will be history as well. And MO is more convenient
already now. Also, fully supported (as it is just a removable disk
from the OS's point of view).
DVD-RAM is, of course, the same good old MO technology, just
repackaged and relabelled. And I am quite convinced, that of all
today's storage technologies, the MO one is certain to finally get
most of the rewritable, removable data storage media market (for
some time, at least). The questions are:
(a) what *incarnation* of MO will be the one to become really
popular and
(b) when?
The DVD-RAM standard is far from being stable now. DVD-RAM support
in Linux is next to nonexistent. Also, the hardware is still quite
expensive. In short, DVD-RAM is simply not a solution for Linux
today.
And, depending on the use you plan for the drive, the question of
being obsolete may not mean the same thing. If you need to store
your data for, say, 5 years or more, then everything you buy today
will in a sense be obsolete. But as long as the drive is operational
and the media hold up, you don't care.
If you need exchangeability of data, neither MO nor DVD-RAM is much
good. Specifically, DVD-RAM is no good today and a gamble in the
future.
Regards,
=====================================================================
Artur Swietanowski mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Institut f�r Statistik, Operations Research und Computerverfahren,
Universit�t Wien, Universit�tsstr. 5, A-1010 Wien, Austria
tel. +43 (1) 427 738 620 fax +43 (1) 427 738 629
=====================================================================
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 00:47:35 -0700
From: Tim Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: recommend server hardware for 2.2.5
Suggest a known motherboard. ASUS or Supermicro are both well known.
--
Direct replies to username 'timothymoore'
"Everything is permitted. Nothing is forbidden."
WS Burroughs.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 00:25:34 -0700
From: Tim Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: IDE-Harddisk problem
4 broken drives!???
1. Power supply
2. electrical short in the case
3. very high heat
> We have an important problem with IDE-HD:
> We use RedHat 5.2 with Western Digital (8.4Go) or Maxtor HD (6.4 Go).
> Since 3 months, we have already broken 4 HD under linux (or we get bad
> sectors after a while...)
> I am use to do several partitions with fdisk (between 4 and 8) during
> the linux install.
>
--
Direct replies to username 'timothymoore'
"Everything is permitted. Nothing is forbidden."
WS Burroughs.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 00:36:59 -0700
From: Tim Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Nvidia Riva TNT AGP card ?
XFree86-VGA16-3.3.3-1
XFree86-SVGA-3.3.3-1
XFree86-XF86Setup-3.3.3-1
XFree86-libs-3.3.3-1
XFree86-75dpi-fonts-3.3.3-1
XFree86-100dpi-fonts-3.3.3-1
XFree86-3.3.3-1
Remember to move the 100dpi fonts in front with this card if your monitor is bigger
than 14". 'RIVA TNT' works great for the ASUS 3400.
> I've installed Redhat 5.2 for a freind who had this card and am unable to
> get X working except as a VGA x server.
> The closest in it's card list is RIVA 128 but this doesn't work. Neither
> does the standard Svga server !.
--
Direct replies to username 'timothymoore'
"Everything is permitted. Nothing is forbidden."
WS Burroughs.
------------------------------
From: Ramon Huerta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: LINUX and AMD K6-3D NOW, ANY PROBLEM?
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 10:09:14 +0200
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
following the discussion here,
Does anyone have experience with a good dual board for Amd-K6?
Any news about the Amd-K7?
Ramon
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (James R. Van Zandt)
Subject: Re: GLIB,GTK+ and GIMP (scanner setup)
Date: 13 May 1999 07:52:09 -0400
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Norman Elliott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I still have a problem as I was doing all of this to use my new
>scanner. My SCSI Card sees it but all I get from scanimage -T is no
>SANE devices found. Any ideas please? norm
I just went through this drill. Here's what I suggest:
1) make sure you have "generic" scsi devices configured in the kernel.
2) make sure your /dev/sg* devices are in the filesystem.
3) try "find-scanner", which is part of the sane package. It should
tell you what hardware device the scanner is on (e.g. /dev/sg1).
4) check the configuration file dll.conf, and uncomment the line for
your scanner.
5) check the configuration file for your scanner (e.g. hp.conf). If
it specifies /dev/scanner, then install a symlink there that points
to your scanner device. e.g. "ln -s /dev/sg1 /dev/scanner"
6) if all else fails, install strace and try
"strace -o /tmp/log -ff scanimage -T"
Then look in /tmp/log* for what files the program tries to open.
- Jim Van Zandt
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 00:44:35 -0700
From: Tim Moore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: List of multiport Ethernet cards supported.
> The only card I have been able to find that is readily available and has
> good driver support in Linux is the ZNYX ZX346. It's a 4-port 10/100 full
> duplex NIC. See www.znyx.com for more details.
Agree. Drivers that work with the zx346Q model so far:
- de4x5
- ZNYX 090 tulip mods (http://www.znyx.com/drivers/ZX346drivers.htm)
- tulip
Anyone know how to set 4 static routes for Xover cables?
--
Direct replies to username 'timothymoore'
"Everything is permitted. Nothing is forbidden."
WS Burroughs.
------------------------------
From: "Kid Charlemagne" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Creative/Ensoniq 1373 integrated Sound Drivers
Date: Mon, 10 May 1999 21:33:02 GMT
i'm running linux kernel 2.2.5 with an integrated 'creative/ensoniq 1373'
audio chipset. it appears that creative bought out ensoniq and i've looked
everywhere for these drivers to no avail (even contacted both companies --
got no reply). before i try to compile the ensoniq 1371 drivers can anyone
tell me if they will work and/or if anyone out there is working on 1373
drivers? any info would be greatly appreciated. tx.
------------------------------
From: "Klaus Weiler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Ataptec AVA 1502AP not detected
Date: Mon, 10 May 1999 23:33:38 +0200
Hy
I got a Ataptec AVA 1502AP SCSI card.
the normal Installation (Red Hat) was not able to detect any SCSI device
How can I run my card and is it possibel to run an Scanner with Linux
or a CD-Toaster
Thanks! Klaus
------------------------------
From: "jonjon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Seagate Ultra ATA disks
Date: 13 May 1999 12:06:40 GMT
Can anyone advise on installing ultra ata disks under Linux. There seems to
be something I'm missing.
Sometimes it works ok but down the line I get slow performance (Emacs takes
3 minutes to load etc), other times I get an errror during installation
"Error -2 reading Header)
Thanks in advance
Frank
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: westprog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To:
comp.lang.java.advocacy,comp.os.linux.advocacy,comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy
Subject: Re: All the current OSes are idiotic (was Re: Is Windows for idiots?)
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 12:13:50 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brad BARCLAY) wrote:
> In <7hbsks$upu$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, westprog <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
writes:
> >> If what you're talking about is the idea of "objects" (such as
files
> >> and
> >> commands or programs) being understood by the OS and having
properties
> >> and actions encapsulated together, considder the r&d that is being
> >> done with the GNOME project and it's use of CORBA interface ideas.
> >
> >I'll go and look at it at once.
>
> Of course, what GNOME is trying to achieve is exactly what the
OS/2
> WorkPlace Shell did achieve was back in 1992, and has been refined
multiple
> times since. The WPS is a fully OOUI based on SOM - IBM's CORBA ORB
system.
>
> And it's quite a fair bit more advanced than Gnome is in terms of
> OO-ness, for both users and developers. And as an added bonus, OS/2
has the
> fastest JDK v1.1.7 implementation available :).
>
> Everything you're looking for describes OS/2 to a T - it may be
worth
> your while checking it out.
I'll go look at that too, right away. Of course, I am envisaging
something object oriented at a deeper level than the shell. (I don't
know enough about OS/2 to know if this is the case or not).
--
J.
--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.---
------------------------------
From: Zeljko Cvrkotic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Newbie humble Q: can't run autoboot.bat at D:\
Date: Mon, 10 May 1999 09:58:08 +0200
> > Hi Group,
> > I hope somebody can point me to a better place if this is not the
> > appropriated ng to discauss this question.
> >
> > I got the redhat linux 5.2 installation guide with the free CD from
> > linuxmall.com. Soon I realized that I need the boot discatte, or run autoboot
> > at cd-rom. However, at dos prompt the machine can't recognize d drive. I
> > suppose I need some driver. However this is school's box I'm messing around
> > with. I have absolutely no idea where to start.
> >
> > I suppose I can get a bootdisk from a new linux distro (openLinux2.2 is
> > cheap) or get a linux 5.2 box from ebay. Any other recommendation? Any
> > program that can format a floppy disk in linux format and make a linux
> > bootdisk from the dos prompt?
> >
> > Any input is greatly apprecated.
> >
The problem is in Win because it puts some REMs in autoexec.bat. That
means that you can access CD from Win but not from DOS. The solution is
next: edit AUTOEXEC.BAT and remove
REM -------- CD ROM by Windows 95 ----- (or something like that),delete
line,
REM -----------C:\WIN95\COMMAND\MSCDEX.EXE /D:MTMIDE01 /M:10, delete
REM ---------
reboot your PC and try to access CDROM. If it not the solution, write
me.
====================================================================
Zeljko Cvrkotic Linux Users Group of Yugoslavia
[EMAIL PROTECTED] www.linux.org.yu
====================================================================
------------------------------
From: "Walter Harms" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: linux not supporting my Network card?
Date: 13 May 1999 12:25:43 GMT
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>Hi,
> I have a compaq prosignia 200 with an onboard netelligence network
>card. I'm using redhat linux 5.1 and I can't seem to get the network
>card to work. (I'm new to the linux/unix environment) Do I have have
>settings for it to even notice the network card? or is my card not
>supported by redhat? If anyone can help I would appreciate it.
i guess you should find out what chip is inside a compaq prosignia 200.
Distributor sometimes change the chips without notice.
walter
--
=====
"It seems that your computers are as stubborn as you are."
=====
------------------------------
From: Gaetano Bellanca <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: HELP ASUS P2B-F
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 14:55:13 +0200
Hi,
I'm having problem installing Linux on a PII400.
I'm using the boot and root disks of the slackware version (net.i and
color.gz).
The system seems to boot regularly but, when using the root disk, it
says:
ext2fs found at block 0
restricting filesystem from 3733 to 144o blocks
loading ram disk into 1440 blocks done
ext2-fs error ....
The motherboard is a ASUS P2B-F rev 1008
any idea?
Thanks in advance
Gaetano Bellanca
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Pierre Asselin)
Subject: Re: SCSI Problem
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 13:32:58 GMT
Mykool <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>The physical layout is in this order:
>NEC CD-ROM (Terminated)
>Panasonic CD-R CW-7502
>Iomega Zip 100
>Umax 1220S (terminated)
>Adaptec 2940U2W (terminated)
Remove the termination on the Umax.
--
--Pierre Asselin, Westminster, Colorado
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chris Sherlock)
Crossposted-To:
comp.lang.java.advocacy,comp.os.linux.advocacy,comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy
Subject: Re: All the current OSes are idiotic (was Re: Is Windows for idiots?)
Date: 13 May 1999 13:30:28 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ahhh... isn't that the way that Linux is being put together?
Except not by companies.
Chris S.
On Thu, 13 May 1999 02:03:56 -0700, Tempman1 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
:
:I agree that all OSes are somewhat idiotic. Almost everything is built by one one
:vendor sent to the customer as a giant piece of code.
:
:I would be nice if an OS could be broken into several major components that
:follow the specifications. Each component could then be developed by a different
:company. Finally, all the components could be stitched together to form an OS.
:This is the way hardware is built. Why not software too?
:
:Tempman1
:
:
:
------------------------------
From: Direct Connect <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: cobalt raq q
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 15:04:39 +0100
anyone ever setup a cobalt raq? having problems in it handing mail,
specifically the sendmail SMART_HOST option. i look after a sub domain
(sub.domain.co.uk) all our external mail is handled by
server.domain.co.uk. have put the entry in the sendmail.cf but it seems
to be ignored by the raq.
help...
markj
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (mj)
Subject: Re: Is there a 3D video card...
Date: 13 May 1999 13:13:53 GMT
Hello,
>In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>Randy Heineke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>Michael Meissner wrote:
>>> Randolph Heineke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>>
>>> > I am looking for a video card that can accelerate 1600x1200@85Hz with
>>> > 24-32bpp in 3D that has XFree86 drivers. As far as I can tell:
>>> >
>>> > G200 -( Matrox Millenia) can't do it at 85 Hz
>>> > TNT -does not have 24-32bpp support in XFree86
>>>
>>> Huh? I'm using 3.3.3.1 of the SVGA server on a Diamond 550 PCI card, and
I'm
>>> definately running 1600x1200 32bpp 82Mhz (couldn't quite get 85Mhz,
>>and I don't
>>> remember whether the card or my Nokia monitor topped out).
>>
>> Michael, thank you for your reply. I have seen some claims that the
>>Viper 550
>>can indeed operate 1600x1200@85Hz in 24 or 32 bpp with 3D acceleration with
>>XFree86.
3D Aceleration under Xfree86 ?!?!?! Please tell me how you did that (i have a
Elsa Erazor II, Riva TNT). I though Xfree86 4.0 would be the first Xfree
release supporting hardware 3D aceleration.
By the way, i can't get 24bpp on my Box, but i could test with 800x600 only
(Oldtimer Monitor).
bye.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,comp.os.linux.portable,alt.os.linux.caldera
Subject: Re: Digital HiNote 2000 & Caldera OpenLinux 2.2 Setup
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 14:54:37 GMT
In article <7hc5id$84f$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> I was able to get Caldera's OpenLinux 2.2 installed last night on my
> Digital HiNote 2000 P233MMX notebook succesfully from cdrom boot
except
> for the following things:
>
> 1) Notebook power management feature
> 2) Sound card
> 3) Xircom Combo Ethernet + 56K modem (I am not going to network so I
> didnt select ethernet support in the install, I just
> need to get the modem working)
I had to reinstall using the LISA floppies in order to get this working
(on a Dell, but its the PCMCIA that is the problem). The errata (which
of course I only read later :-) points this out. You may also need to
change your modem away from dev/modem to TTSY3 (caps?), I did. I
found this out by looking at the kppp error log, which was very helpful.
I don't know if PCMCIA can be installed later by building a new kernel
or something, I'm too much of a newbie to work out how to do that at the
moment. I have got the modem working now though.
The downside is that KDE now now longer boots on startup, so I'll have
to figure that out as well. Presumably there is a startup file somewhere
I add the line 'KDE' into?
There is also a file that needs to be edited (its on the faq on the
caldera site) to get X running. note that the faq appears to be wrong,
it refers to 'home' at one point, when I think it should be $home. At
least, I got errors with home, and it worked with $home :-)
> I suppose I could install the ethernet drivers and just not hook it up
> to a network, but I didnt know if this would "hang" the system because
> a live network couldn't be found during bootup.
>
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks
> George
>
> --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
> ---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.---
>
--
Joe
===================================
Email = joecitt AT hotmail DOT com
--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.---
------------------------------
From: "fr�d�ric morini�re" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Video card MATROX ULTIMA/IMPRESSION
Date: 13 May 1999 12:46:09 GMT
How to configure linux with this card and launch graphic interface Xwindow,
KDE etc... [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Linux dials modem but Browsers can't find it?
Date: Thu, 13 May 1999 15:05:20 GMT
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
diahedrial <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> rprescott wrote:
> >
> > I am a relative Newbie. Running Linux as a hobby on my triple
boot
> > system (NT 4.0 server, Win98, and RH 5.2). I am running RH 5.2 with
> > 2.2.6 kernel and Gnome 1.0 with Enlightenment DR 0.15 on P120.
> >
> > I set up my modem to call my ISP. This part works, and examining
> > /var/log/messages shows me that I am logged in to my ISP,
authenticated,
> > and have received an IP from them. This was done using pppd, with
the
> > /etc/ppp/options file, edited to call my ISP. Minicom will also
call my
> > ISP and I am able to log in through it at the command line with no
> > problem. However, Lynx, Netscape, ftp, or gftp seem unable to find
this
> > link to the outside world. Basically they tell me there are no DNS
> > servers available, no matter what I try to access. I am also
completely
> > unable to access my ISP's mail or news servers, even though ifconfig
> > still shows me connected.
> >
> > I would gladly RTFM if I knew where to start. In that other OS
> > world, as soon as you are logged in to the ISP then you can use any
old
> > browser or client you want and you don't need to tell it how to
find the
> > modem. Do these Linux browsers need to be told this basic item, and
if
> > so, where does this info need to be.
>
> Any OS needs to have the IP address of the DNS server(s) for
> your ISP! or you will never find anything by it's domain name.
> Check your "/etc/resolv.conf" file, if you haven't added the IP's
> for your ISP's DNS server(s), add them here. If you don't know
> what they are, contact you ISP for the information.
> Try "man resolv.conf" for details...
>
I have been having the same problem, and I assume the solution will be
adding the DNS to resolve.conf. I have a suspicion my ISP changed the
DNS address without telling anyone. However, I emailed him the other
day about my lookup failures and here's his response:
"If you are experiencing difficulties it is probably because you have
put a fixed DNS ip address instead of server assigned. If you need a
fixed IP for some reason make sure primary is 209.119.76.3 and
secondary is 164.109.1.3."
So what does he mean by "server assigned?" Does this mean that I
shouldn't need anything in my resolve.conf and my problem is something
else?
Thanks,
Chad Dressler
--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==--
---Share what you know. Learn what you don't.---
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Hardware Digest
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