Re: [Hardhats-members] CPRS client MS XP sp2 Incompatibility

2004-09-12 Thread Lloyd Milligan
Right. The Delphi-style error message is not obviously XP-related (although who knows in these complicated systems). You mentioned opening CPRS successfully from another machine. It might be informative to try the reverse experiment, where the demo database is mounted on another achine. --The

Re: [Hardhats-members] Mumps question: What is difference between Kill and New?

2004-09-12 Thread Kevin Toppenberg
Thanks Richard, I have come to think of M as a scripting language, rather than a full-featured language such as c/c++. Thus I am not expecting as much from it as I otherwise might. (Please lets not get into a flame out here). I used to like high-level languages because they made implementation

[Hardhats-members] Linux question: Detecting ethernet card

2004-09-12 Thread Kevin Toppenberg
Linux question here. I know this is not a linux form, but you all often have the answer. I inherited a PC at the office that I decided to switch from Windows ME to Linux Hat 9, with plans to make a web server out of it. I thought I might even put my test VistA system on it so that I could work

RE: [Hardhats-members] Linux question: Detecting ethernet card

2004-09-12 Thread Nancy Anthracite
How about going to Fedora Core 2, which is a Red Hat offspring but is being brought up to date, maintained, etc., and is more likely to recognize your card? If you want a DVD of it and don't have a high speed line, you or anyone else on the list who writes to me is welcome to it. -Original

RE: [Hardhats-members] Linux question: Detecting ethernet card

2004-09-12 Thread Kevin Toppenberg
I might consider it if I need to. But I have the RH9 disks, and a RH9 manual, so it would be nice to get RH9 to work. If I changed to Fedora, I might run into other problems. Thanks Kevin --- Nancy Anthracite [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: How about going to Fedora Core 2, which is a Red Hat

RE: [Hardhats-members] Linux question: Detecting ethernet card

2004-09-12 Thread Nancy Anthracite
Yes, but you might be holding on to other problems that have since been fixed - a double edged sword. Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Kevin Toppenberg Sent: Sunday, September 12, 2004 1:26 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE:

RE: [Hardhats-members] Linux question: Detecting ethernet card

2004-09-12 Thread Kevin Toppenberg
Well, all's well that ends well. With Nancy's suggestion, I decided to try some other linux versions. I had a SusE live demo disk. Popped it in the cdrom and rebooted. For some reason the disk did NOT boot, but when Redhat booted this time, it DID detect the new network card. Do you want to

RE: [Hardhats-members] Linux question: Detecting ethernet card

2004-09-12 Thread Joseph Dal Molin
Both the cards look familiar and should be supported. I use Mandrake and it is a bit easier to configure things with. My suggestions are: - there is a command linuxconf I think, with which you can also set up network cards that may be easier to use - if you have Knoppix CD load it, it is quite

RE: [Hardhats-members] Linux question: Detecting ethernet card

2004-09-12 Thread Crawford Rainwater
For RedHat/Fedora, the redhat-config-network (TUI or GUI) will assist in a nice(r) way on changing network cards and configurations. This is assuming the module is there as well, if not, it will ask for some CDs I suspect and do some kernel mods. A latest release of Knoppix (v3.6 presently) will