On Mon, Apr 22, 2013 at 03:05:51PM +1000, Dean Hamstead wrote:
For a network install, whilst you boot from some form of attached media
(cd/dvd/usb) all the actual .deb files are retrieved via
http/ftp/whatever then copied to disk
Dean
On 22/04/13 14:57, wrote:
Debian has
On Mon, Apr 22, 2013 at 06:51:18AM -0500, Chris Swenson wrote:
It's possible you have a CPU that has 2 cores, but is still not 64-bit
compatible. I have a Dell laptop with Intel Core Duo that would seem to be
64-bit capable, but upon further inspection is not. Check your CPU hardware
I would update the bios and run memtest86.M/B model?
On Apr 23, 2013 11:27 AM, Goswin von Brederlow goswin-...@web.de wrote:
On Mon, Apr 22, 2013 at 06:51:18AM -0500, Chris Swenson wrote:
It's possible you have a CPU that has 2 cores, but is still not 64-bit
compatible. I have a Dell laptop
On Tue, Apr 23, 2013 at 11:29:03AM +0300, Vasileios Karaklioumis wrote:
I would update the bios and run memtest86.M/B model?
Personally, I'd look at more of the error message before even starting
that.
On Apr 23, 2013 11:27 AM, Goswin von Brederlow [1]goswin-...@web.de
wrote:
I was trying to get google earth to work with the proprietary driver - it fails, so I thought I
would try the nouveau driver as it now supports dual monitors.
Never got it to recognize the card ( seems strange as wheezey is just about
stable? )
I followed the error -16 back to kernel issues
Don't use the nvidia package from debian for googleearth. They do not work, as
the 32-bit-libs of nvidia have dependency problems. Obviously no one cared for
this at the moment.
Just download the installer from the nvidia website and execute it - works
like a charm!
Good luck!
Hans
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