Have you downloaded your kernel source?
Alsa creates kernel modules for your system. These are called 'drivers' in windows.
Alsa needs kernel source to make proper modules for your particular system. A
compiled an alsa module for a 2.0.38 kernel may look a little different than for a
2.4.3
If you are running Debian, don't waste your time grabbing the source from
other websites,
just install it via 'apt-get install'
it will install all the needed dependancies that way. Installing from
original source is a last resort for Debian...
Seth
- Original Message -
From: Julia
A decent used inkjet, maybe. Can anyone suggest the best second-hand
places to try?
Randolph
At the risk of being accused of anything but helpful..
For a small to medium network, it seems to me that isolating your servers from
BOTH the LAN and outside networks with a DMZ firewall AND secure access
box with POTS remote access makes lots of sense and is relatively inexpensive
to
Rite-Aid has Apollo (HP DJ 8xx compatible) for $79 and they have a $30 or $40
rebate. $49 is cheap enuf?
jk
At 11:54 AM 3/31/2001, you wrote:
A decent used inkjet, maybe. Can anyone suggest the best second-hand
places to try?
Randolph
-
James S. Kaplan KG7FU
Here's a message I originally posted on Tuesday. I'm reposting
it in the hope that somebody out there cares about my firewall
saga.
-
Bob Miller wrote:
This is a bit long, so here are the main points.
* Coyote Linux makes setting up a firewall way too easy.
* The Linuxcare
Has anyone successfully configured DHCP to set a host to a static
IP address based on its client ID or host name? I couldn't figure
out how to get this to work.
We occasionally swap our wireless cards around, so I don't want to
base the IP address on the Mac address.
Another, less pressing,
I have been getting the same IP by simply claiming it...
My box gets the same IP from the firewall each time by default,
and the firewall gets the same IP "consistently" from my outside
network, both of which use dhcp. "Consistently" is entirely based
on my experience, I've never seen
At 02:54 PM 3/31/2001 -0500, you wrote:
A decent used inkjet, maybe. Can anyone suggest the best second-hand
places to try?
Randolph
Hey, you can get a brand new HP Apollo for $79 or so and then get a $30
rebate. Why get a used one?
Regards, Jim
At 02:47 PM 3/31/2001 -0800, you wrote:
Patrick R. Wade wrote:
Does anyone have any experiences or recommendations for a
PCMCIA 10/100 Ethernet card for Debian GNU/Linux? I'm looking
to purchase one soon.
Did you check the supported cards list?
For less than $50 and re-inkers @ $20 for black and $30 for color,
just buy one and find out! I'm sure someone on the list will buy it
for a windoze printer if you can't get it to print from Linux.
jk
At 01:35 PM 3/31/2001, you wrote:
On Sat, Mar 31, 2001 at 01:05:05PM -0800, James S.
DHCP servers will often just revalidate the client's lease (ie, the same IP address.)
However there is NO GUARANTEE that the client will get the same lease. This is the
same with service providers, or local lans.
Bob, are you using dhcpd-2.2.x? In my debian config file there are a lot of
On Sat, Mar 31, 2001 at 02:47:23PM -0800, Bob Miller wrote:
Patrick R. Wade wrote:
Does anyone have any experiences or recommendations for a
PCMCIA 10/100 Ethernet card for Debian GNU/Linux? I'm looking
to purchase one soon.
Did you check the supported cards list?
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