oh ok, sounds good then... I'll definitly try it out soon then.
=
| Kenneth Culver | FreeBSD: The best NT upgrade|
| Unix Systems Administrator | ICQ #: 24767726 |
| and student at The | AI
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Kenneth Wayne
Culver writes:
: on another note, did you ever get a chance to look at that code that
: supposedly fixes a broken statclock? It is a patch against 4.1-RELEASE I
: believe. I could still find it for you if you want.
I believe that those issues have bee
on another note, did you ever get a chance to look at that code that
supposedly fixes a broken statclock? It is a patch against 4.1-RELEASE I
believe. I could still find it for you if you want.
=
| Kenneth Culver | Free
Alright, will do.
=
| Kenneth Culver | FreeBSD: The best NT upgrade|
| Unix Systems Administrator | ICQ #: 24767726 |
| and student at The | AIM: muythaibxr |
| The Universi
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Kenneth Wayne
Culver writes:
: Is the cardbus stuff in the GENERIC kernel, or will I have to change it
: and build my own release or custom sysinstall?
You'll have to build a NEWCARD kernel, and put it on the install disk.
Warner
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EM
> : is installing FreeBSD-CURRENT with sysinstall using a cardbus supported
> : card (such as a 3com cardbus 3cfe575 or something) working yet? Just
> : wondering because I want to get windows off my laptop, and this will bring
> : me one step closer... (with support for my ess maestro3 chip being
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Kenneth Wayne
Culver writes:
: is installing FreeBSD-CURRENT with sysinstall using a cardbus supported
: card (such as a 3com cardbus 3cfe575 or something) working yet? Just
: wondering because I want to get windows off my laptop, and this will bring
: me one step c
is installing FreeBSD-CURRENT with sysinstall using a cardbus supported
card (such as a 3com cardbus 3cfe575 or something) working yet? Just
wondering because I want to get windows off my laptop, and this will bring
me one step closer... (with support for my ess maestro3 chip being the
last step)