Richard is right, of course, but sometimes it is easier to cheat. If you
have a recent Red Hat installer around, let it try to identify your NIC for
you. In my experience, RH has the best NIC prober around. Even though I
don't use RH here, I keep a bootdisk around for that one purpose.

At 08:32 PM 1/18/00 +0000, Richard Adams wrote:
>On Tue, 18 Jan 2000,  James (Jim) Hatridge wrote about,  Linksys ether16
LAN card:
>> Hi all,
>> 
>> I'm trying to connect two computers. One's ok, but I'm having the devil of
>> a time with the other. I've got a Linksys ether16 LAN card. Does anyone
>> else use this? How do I tell what driver to use, ie ne2000 etc? 
>> 
>> Jan 18 14:49:55 Opus kernel: eth0: ewrk3_probe() cannot find device at
>> 0x0300.
>> 
>> I get the above error, how can I figure out where the card is, ie 0x0300
>> etc?
[details deleted]
>You will either have to extracht the card and note what chips are on it, or
>conslut the URL's, all of which should be in you /usr/doc/* dirs if you
>installed all the normal documentation.


------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"---
Ray Olszewski                                        -- Han Solo
Palo Alto, CA                                    [EMAIL PROTECTED]        
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