Files
oldlinux-files/docs/mail-archive/linux-misc/Volume2/digest804
2024-02-19 00:23:35 -05:00

705 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext

From: Digestifier <Linux-Misc-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Reply-To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 94 06:13:11 EDT
Subject: Linux-Misc Digest #804
Linux-Misc Digest #804, Volume #2 Fri, 23 Sep 94 06:13:11 EDT
Contents:
Re: 80-bit floats with f2c and linux (Mitchell R Grunes)
Re: XFree86 patch for DOOM 320x200 doublescan (Dick Streefland)
Re: SB16 MCD and Mitsumi problem - Help (Kees de Bruin)
OS/2 vs Linux Speed was ( Re: OS/2 fan wants to try Linux..) (Julian Boot)
Atlanta linux users (Jeffrey Nipp)
Re: Don't use Linux or it's to academic! (Matt Welsh)
Re: Contrib. $s for Linux Dev (NightHawk)
Re: Compaq Contura Aero (Makoto Kikutani)
Re: Don't use Linux or it's to academic! (Joshua R. Poulson)
Cyclades 8 port card (Gene Buckle)
Linux on Dauphin or other subnotebooks? (Phillip Burgess)
[Q] Seyon: turning bell off (Ricardo Nassif)
NE2000+ and AHA1542CF problems (Dermot Bradley)
Re: Linux on 40,000 FREE(ish) CD's (Mikko Anttila)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: grunes@imsy1.nrl.navy.mil (Mitchell R Grunes)
Crossposted-To: comp.lang.fortran
Subject: Re: 80-bit floats with f2c and linux
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 15:38:16 GMT
>In <35iu09$1l4@news.u.washington.edu> xyzzy@u.washington.edu (Trent Piepho)
>writes:
>routines in libm. Does anyone know if getting 80-bit numbers ( and
>exponentation ) from f2c+gcc+linux is possible??? What if I write 80-bit
>libm routines?
There may be another approach, since someone did once post
the following message:
==========================CUT HERE===========================
From: khb@chiba.Eng.Sun.COM (Keith Bierman-khb@chiba.eng.sun.com::SunPro)
Old posting from another group follows:
Article: 4572 of sci.math.num-analysis
From: dbailey@wk49.nas.nasa.gov (David H. Bailey)
Subject: Fortran multiple precision package and translator
Date: 6 Nov 92 01:12:07 GMT
Organization: NAS, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
Some of you may be aware of a multiprecision computation package and a
multiprecision Fortran translator that I have developed during the
past year or two. I am now pleased to announce that this software has
been approved by NASA Ames for unlimited international distribution,
at no cost. A brief description of this software is as follows:
The first package contains approximately 85 Fortran subroutines that
perform a variety of arithmetic operations and transcendental
functions. The basic arithmetic routines are very efficient, and for
extra high levels of precision (about about 1000 digits), some
additional routines are available that employ advanced algorithms,
such FFT-based multiplication and the Borwein transcendental
algorithms, for additional speedup. On some problems these routines
are over 200 times faster than certain other multiprecision tools.
However, as with other such packages, manually converting a program to
use these routines is a tedious and error-prone process. To
facilitate such conversions, I have now developed a multiprecision
translator for Fortran programs. By means of source directives
(special comments) placed in a standard Fortran-77 program, the user
declares the precision level and specifies which variables in each
subprogram are to be treated as multiprecision. The translator
program reads this source program and outputs a program with the
appropriate multiprecision subroutine calls, which can then be linked
with the multiprecision package and executed.
This translator program supports multiprecision integer, real and
complex datatypes. The required array space for multiprecision data
types is automatically allocated. In the evaluation of computational
expressions, all of the usual conventions for operator precedence and
mixed mode operations are upheld. Furthermore, most of the Fortran-77
intrinsics, such as ABS, MOD, NINT, COS, EXP are supported and produce
true multiprecision values.
Both the multiprecision package and translator are written in highly
portable Fortran-77 and have been successfully implemented on a
variety of systems, ranging from parallel supercomputers to
workstations.
If anyone is interested in obtaining this software, plus the
accompanying documentation, send me a note, and I will respond by
e-mail. I eventually intend to place this software on public media
such as netlib, but for the time being I am handling it myself, so
that any bug fixes or enhancements can be promptly distributed. Since
it is a small but significant amount of trouble for me to respond,
please don't request unless you are somewhat serious about needing
this software.
David H. Bailey
NASA Ames Research Center
dbailey@nas.nasa.gov
(opinions expressed are mine alone)
Mitchell R Grunes (grunes@imsy1.nrl.navy.mil)
Allied-Signal Technical Services
c/o Code 7230 Naval Research Lab
------------------------------
From: dicks@tasking.nl (Dick Streefland)
Subject: Re: XFree86 patch for DOOM 320x200 doublescan
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 11:52:57 GMT
--> would you be willing to upload this patched server to sunsite or
--> some such so those of us who also have the card but don't have the
--> disk space to compile X can try it out? thanks,
I'm sorry, but I do not have ftp capabilities. We only have a
uucp link for news and mail here. I think the server is a little
too large to mail (we have to pay for outgoing mail :-(). So
perhaps someone else could compile the server? You will need a
lot of disk space, though. The simplest way is to extract the
complete XFree86-2.1 tree, patch it to 2.1.1, apply my patch and
then compile the S3 server only.
To compile the S3 server only, without compiling the complete XFree86
tree, you have to make some adjustments in the file mit/config/site.def:
1) uncomment a #define which is called something like
#define BuildServersOnly YES
2) change all #defines controlling the compilation of the various
servers to NO, except for the S3 server.
After these modifications, you can use the command (/bin/bash):
make World > world.log 2>&1 &
in the 'mit' directory to build the server 'mit/server/XF86_S3'.
On my Linux system (486DX2-66/16Mb this takes about 70 minutes.
You will need about 120 Mb of disk space for the XFree86-2.1
source code and generated objects.
--
Dick Streefland //// Tasking Software BV
dicks@tasking.nl (@ @) The Netherlands
========================oOO==(_)==OOo========================
------------------------------
From: bruin@tasking.nl (Kees de Bruin)
Subject: Re: SB16 MCD and Mitsumi problem - Help
Reply-To: bruin@tasking.nl (Kees de Bruin)
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 12:10:31 GMT
Raymond Ho writes:
> I have a Mitsumi FX001D controlled by a Sound Blaster 16 MCD. The
> SB16 is their latest revision with the Mitsumi CD IO port set at
> 0x230. The only options I have are 230, 250, 270 and 290, while with
> the older board, the IO port can be set starting at 0x300. I was
> trying to install the Yggdrasil Linux, the boot diskette insists on
> looking for a Sony CD ROM drive, I guest it sees the IO port of 0x230
> being set, I believe that is where the Sony default. Can I use the
> boot command to tell LILO that I have a Mitsumi CD at 0x230 and IRQ
> 11?
I use the same combination, but I think you are mixing the IO adresses
of the sound card and the CD interface. My sound card is configured for
0x220, DMA 1 + 5 and IRQ 5, and the Mitsumi interface is configured for
address 0x340, DMA 7 and IRQ 11 (all default values).
After changing the values in mcd.h and recompiling the kernel (1.1.51) I
can use the CD-ROM with no problems at all.
--
Kees de Bruin bruin@tasking.nl
Tasking Software B.V. Tel. +31-33-55 85 84
OS/2: Bill Gates' worst nightmare!
------------------------------
From: cs307319@dingo.cc.uq.oz.au (Julian Boot)
Subject: OS/2 vs Linux Speed was ( Re: OS/2 fan wants to try Linux..)
Date: 22 Sep 1994 20:17:05 +1000
hpa@ahab.eecs.nwu.edu (H. Peter Anvin) writes:
>Followup to: <1994Sep13.181131.13799@pvi.com>
>By author: todd@pvi.com (todd)
>In newsgroup: comp.os.linux.misc
>>
>> I recently added Linux to my OS/2 machine and am quite
>> happy, so I feel somewhat qualified to answer this post:
>>
>> Jim Chisholm (Jim@JChisholm.Phys.Dal.Ca) wrote:
>> : Hi folks..
>> : I'm a long time advocate of OS/2 and I am curious about Linux..
>>
>> : 1)will it run on a386DX40 8M ?
>>
>> Yes, but slowly.
>>
>But not anywhere near as slowly as OS/2.
Quite. On a 8MB machine, Linux and X are quite a bit more snappy than
OS/2 and PM. One of the major reasons seems to be the much better handling
of swapping in Linux - even the pacthes for OS/2 2.11 do not improve things
much. Also PM is very slow. Shame, but true.
-julian
--
cs307319@dingo.cc.uq.oz.au
Who is this General Failure anyway? And why is he reading drive A ?
------------------------------
From: jnipp@unix.cc.emory.edu (Jeffrey Nipp)
Subject: Atlanta linux users
Date: 22 Sep 1994 04:45:19 GMT
This is an open call to Atlanta (Ga, USA) area linux users interested in
forming a users group. Please contact me via email so you can join in
our discussions (or so that we may join in your discussions if you happen
to be further along).
Yours,
Jeff
------------------------------
From: mdw@cs.cornell.edu (Matt Welsh)
Subject: Re: Don't use Linux or it's to academic!
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 14:21:31 GMT
In article <7PIWkunLQ994071yn@oslonett.no> serik@oslonett.no writes:
>2. There are no programs available that does Word-processing, spreadsheets,
> databases, presentation graphics and so on, as we have under MS-DOS
> and Windows.
False.
>6. Nationalized version of the few programs existing are not available.
False. Both on the "few programs" count, but also on the internationalization.
>7. Nationalized versions of Linux is not available.
False.
>9. Printed manuals and easy 'Get started' manuals does not exist.
False.
>10. Support for Mulit-media is shaky.
False.
>11. Support for ISDN is not generally available.
False.
>12. There is no disk-compression.
False.
I don't give a damn whether this is "flame-bait" or not; I'm tired
of seeing this kind of misinformation propagated by people without
the faintest idea of what they're talking about. Please research your
claims in more detail before posting them to USENET.
M. Welsh
------------------------------
From: fsosi@j51.com (NightHawk)
Subject: Re: Contrib. $s for Linux Dev
Date: 19 Sep 1994 23:58:45 -0400
jwest@jwest.ecen.okstate.edu wrote:
: In article <35kjik$d46@panix2.panix.com> rhockens@panix.com (Ralph Hockens)
: writes:
:
: >I'd like to give something back to the folks whose time and labor make this
: >all possible. I'm not a programmer, nor am I proficient enough to
: >meaningfully participate in preparing documentation. I can however,
: One of the most helpful things you can do is to make a *complete*
: bug report to a developer whenever you find something that doesn't
I love that. It will save me lots of time. I'd like to see a small
piece of code to let me reproduce the bug. Sometimes I have to ftp
a 100K file and find out the bugs may be just a missing <stdlib.h>.
: work the way it should. (Of course, first make sure it is not a setup
: or use error by asking on the net. And don't worry about any flamers who
: >contribute some money (not a heck of a lot, but something).
: >
: >Question is, where ought one contribute money to best support the ongoing
: >development of Linux and Linux-related software, documentation, and the like?
: Well, I have donated to the Free Software Foundation (who were/are
: responsible for the development of a very large number of the tools
: used under Linux) and to the WINE development team (and six months later
: still haven't bothered to install a WINE ALPHA release :). I'm sure
: you could find many other worthy places. But remember, no one *expects*
: anything in return at all, especially money. That is the beauty of
I enjoy doing something useful to other and like computers. I always
like to help out if I can. For whatever reason, it seems not very easy
for me to meet new people. I usually spend most of my free time on
Linux. I'd like to make new friends who can share my interests.
: Linux.
At a birthday party I talked to a stranger. It turned out he was taking
a computer class and his professor gave them a Linux bootdisk. It
is kind of weird to me. When I started working on Linux, I never expected
it would become what it is now.
NH
------------------------------
From: kikutani@ams.co.jp (Makoto Kikutani)
Subject: Re: Compaq Contura Aero
Date: Tue, 20 Sep 1994 02:25:29 GMT
In article <35k6g1$qk8@trane.uninett.no> hta@uninett.no (Harald T. Alvestrand) writes:
> The timestop in sleep is fixed by the APM BIOS patches posted recently.
> They are also a start towards making sleeping work in general.
Which version of APM BIOS patch ?
I tried to patch 1.1.50 with apm_bios.0.3 (Sep 2), and got kernel panic !
[Contura Aero 4/33c user]
Makoto
--
Kikutani Makoto @ Advanced Mobile Systems, inc.
3-37-34 Izumicho, Kokubunji-shi, Tokyo, Japan 185
Phone: 0423-28-1843 FAX: 0423-28-1859
E-Mail: kikutani@ams.co.jp
------------------------------
From: jrp@widcat.Widener.EDU (Joshua R. Poulson)
Subject: Re: Don't use Linux or it's to academic!
Date: 22 Sep 1994 11:51:46 -0400
In article <7PIWkunLQ994071yn@oslonett.no>,
Svein Erik Brostigen <serik@oslonett.no> wrote:
><Flam-bait follows!>
>Now, I would never (or at least not for some years) recommend Linux to
>my customers as an alternative to MS-DOS or OS/2, especially not when
>we are talking about networks and day-to-day use of business programs.
>2. There are no programs available that does Word-processing, spreadsheets,
> databases, presentation graphics and so on, as we have under MS-DOS
> and Windows.
Not true. xspread, oleo, and sc may not be as sophisticated as Excel,
but they sure do my monthly budget well enough.
TeX vs. word processing is its own flame war, but MY secretaries have
no worries with it.
>3. There is currently no easy way to interconnect to LAN Server or Netware
> natively, i.e. from Linux.
Run NFS on either type of server and you're there.
>4. There is no support for MCA-based machines.
That's IBM's fault, not Linux's.
>5. There is no support for Token-Ring (some ALPHA code is floating around
> on the Net, but....)
Yeah, but Linux is geared more towards TCP/IP networks... you know,
the one network protocol suite that is supported by more than 1000
hardware vendors, and more software companies than you can shake a
stick at.
>6. Nationalized version of the few programs existing are not available.
But it's getting better. Unix is more nationalized than a lot of
operating environments.
>7. Nationalized versions of Linux is not available.
Are you kidding? With the biggest bunch of Linux supporters in Finland
and Germany?
>8. Support for modern graphics accelerators like Mach64, Stealth64 etc,
> is not scheduled until maybe next year.
I'm enjoying my S3 quite nicely, thanks. Again, vendor support is an
issue because they want to sell or license their technology instead of
telling people what you need to use it.
It's a viscious circle. People aren't gonna buy what they don't have
software for, and you can't afford to make the software for it if
people aren't buying the hardware.
>9. Printed manuals and easy 'Get started' manuals does not exist.
Definitely not true. Look up the Linux Documentation Project and
the fact that Fintronic ships printed versions of those manuals
when it ships Linux systems.
>10. Support for Mulit-media is shaky.
mpeg_play works nicely on my machine. My SoundBlaster is doing MIDI
mixing. What exactly are you referring to?
>11. Support for ISDN is not generally available.
Order the board from Siemens and ask for the driver. :) Our German
friends are ON THE BALL!
>12. There is no disk-compression.
Also not true. Support for double-space drives is being added to the
MS-DOS driver set as we speak. As for Unix drives, are you insane?
Do you want performance or do you want more lag added to disk access?
>I do have more points, but I think this is enough.
>Personally, I think Linux is great and I'm runnig it on one of my disks,
>but I also run MS-DOS and WfW 3.11 and OS/2 WARP2 BETA, OS/2 2.11, all
>except WARP2 in native language.
That's plenty fine. The great thing about the Linux crowd is that
they don't EXPECT you to run it exclusively. I'd prefer to code for
Linux than for any other environment (except my big POSIX machines
at work).
>When I'm recommending some system to my customers it should be something
>that has a proven record of durability, Netware and Lan Server both have
>that when it comes to NOS'es. MS-DOS and OS/2 have it when it comes to
>PC OS'es.
Yeah, but when you try to do TCP/IP on anything other than Linux,
prepare to rip your hair out. NetWare TCP/IP especially... (you do
NOT want to see my bug list)
>My customers are like all other customers, they will use wordprocessors,
>spreadsheets and so on. They are now used to be able to see the same thing
>on the screen as they will get on the paper. They need to import data
>from a wide range of other products, read MAC disks etc.
Nothing's stopping them. How do these things you mention make Linux
bad?
>In a network environment, things like RAID 5 and STRIPING both adds to
>security and speed.
In a environment like that you have the money to buy a machine with
more I/O bandwidth than a PC to do the job. PC's are laughable when
it comes to serious I/O.
>When it comes to TokenRing and MCA based machines, well IBM is the
>biggest player in the computer world no matter what you people of the
>.edu thinks!
Well, I've got Token Ring machines and Microchannel machines here.
What's your point?
>What amazes me, is that there are so few from the commercial world in
>this fora, only from the academic world.
Usenet started amongst educational institutions. Nonetheless, you'll
find a lot of commercial vendors out here. They just don't have as
much time to post as much... because they're WORKING. :)
>Maybe I should take that as
>a sign telling me that this is of purely academic interest at the
>moment.
Computing in general? Linux? Linux is a freely-available piece of
software that generally needs work to do exactly what you want and
assumes a high level of technical knowledge on the part of the user.
Tell me who fits the bill for that? Hobbyists. Unix wizards.
Academics. Business people do different things for different reasons.
If you are a business person, buy a MIPS box from Control Data and
crank away!
>Now gentlemen, it's up to YOU!
Don't leave out the very vocal, independent, and astute ladies out
here.
--
Joshua R. Poulson, Widener University Department of Computing Systems
------------------------------
From: geneb@connected.com (Gene Buckle)
Subject: Cyclades 8 port card
Date: 22 Sep 1994 19:08:32 -0700
I just completed the install of the new Cyclades 8Y, and it's a great product!
They are being very good about honoring the price screwup in the Oct. issue
of The Linux Journal. If you're not a dealer, you can get the card for $139
from them or Redlaw (their distributor).
Kudos to Randolph Bentson as well. He wrote the driver and was very helpful
when I ran into a problem with it.
Gene.
------------------------------
From: pburgess@netcom.com (Phillip Burgess)
Subject: Linux on Dauphin or other subnotebooks?
Date: Mon, 19 Sep 1994 17:29:47 GMT
I would like to be able to run Linux (or possibly some other UNIX) on a
subnotebook computer such as the Dauphin DTR-1, one of the Compaq "Aero"
machines, or perhaps one of the smaller & cheaper Thinkpads. I would be
infinitely grateful to receive e-mail from anyone who has had a definite
success OR failure with some subnotebook & UNIX combination.
Also, how much Linux would I likely be able to fit on a machine with only
6MB RAM and a 40MB HD? Some basic X11 capability would be nice, but I could
live with just csh, kermit, vi, and a C compiler.
Saw the DTR-1 for the first time this weekend. They're being blown out for
$699 for a prettty complete package. Nifty little machine, except for the
40MB drive (1.3", so it can't be swapped out for anything useful). At the
very least, it would make a dandy portable terminal. (Hmmm... I wonder if
it runs DOOM. :-)
--
Phillip Burgess (pburgess@netcom.com) >belch<
------------------------------
From: rn0@netcom.com (Ricardo Nassif)
Subject: [Q] Seyon: turning bell off
Date: Mon, 19 Sep 1994 17:30:10 GMT
[ Article crossposted from comp.os.linux.help ]
[ Author was Ricardo Nassif ]
[ Posted on Sun, 18 Sep 1994 20:08:24 GMT ]
How to I turn that goddamned bell/beep off? I've tried the -vb and -pop
command line switches for seyon-emu (color_xterm) but it won't accept it.
Also tried things like Seyon.beep: off or Seyon.pop: off, etc, etc in the
.Xdefaults file but with no success. What's the trick here?
Thanks for any suggestions.
.rn
--
|"There is grandeur ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| Ricardo Nassif |||||||
| in this view ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| rn0@netcom.com |||||||
| of life" |Web >> URL:ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/rn0/ricardo.html|
| C. Darwin, 1859 |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||[*GO GNU*]|
--
|"There is grandeur ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| Ricardo Nassif |||||||
| in this view ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| rn0@netcom.com |||||||
| of life" |Web >> URL:ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/rn0/ricardo.html|
| C. Darwin, 1859 |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||[*GO GNU*]|
------------------------------
From: bradley@gpl.com (Dermot Bradley)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development,comp.os.linux.help
Subject: NE2000+ and AHA1542CF problems
Date: 22 Sep 1994 19:22:06 GMT
Hi
I've got a 486/66DX2 running with 16Mb RAM, NE2000+ (Novell) ethernet
card, Adaptec 1542CF.
Running kernel 1.0.9
This machine has mysteriously hung (i.e. needed power cyle) the last few
weekends for no apparent reason.
The NE2000+ is port 300h, IRQ 3 (NO SERIAL CARDS ARE FITTED IN PC) and in
shared IO mode.
The 1542CF is port 330h, IRQ 11, DMA 5.
For some time I've been seeing the following messages in the log files:
In the debug file:
==================
Sep 13 18:37:17 errigle kernel: eth0: transmit timed out, TX status 0xe,
ISR 0x0.
Sep 13 18:37:17 errigle kernel: eth0: Possible network cable problem?
In the syslog file:
===================
Aug 8 03:03:49 errigle kernel: SCSI host 0 timed out - aborting command
Aug 8 13:42:40 errigle kernel: eth0: Transmitter access conflict.
Aug 15 19:19:54 errigle kernel: eth0: DMAing conflict in
ne_block_output.[DMAstat:fffffffe][irqlock:ffffffff]
Aug 22 15:03:05 errigle kernel: SCSI host 0 timed out - aborting command
Aug 22 15:26:37 errigle kernel: eth0: DMAing conflict in
ne_block_output.[DMAstat:fffffffe][irqlock:ffffffff]
Aug 22 22:55:03 errigle kernel: SCSI host 0 timed out - aborting command
Aug 23 05:07:52 errigle kernel: eth0: unexpected TX-done interrupt,
lasttx=-1.
Aug 23 05:07:52 errigle kernel: eth0: idle transmitter, tx1=60, lasttx=-1,
txing=-1.
Aug 23 05:15:45 errigle kernel: SCSI host 0 timed out - aborting command
Aug 23 07:54:55 errigle kernel: SCSI host 0 timed out - aborting command
..........
Sep 19 13:31:29 errigle kernel: SCSI host 0 timed out - aborting command
Sep 19 20:51:21 errigle kernel: eth0: DMAing conflict in
ne_block_output.[DMAsta
t:fffffffe][irqlock:ffffffff]
To cap it all I got the following on the console today:
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: Unable to handle kernel NULL pointer
dereference at address 00000004
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: Oops: 0000
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: EIP: 0010:0012afa7
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: EFLAGS: 00010202
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: eax: 00000000 ebx: 00e5129a ecx:
00000008 edx: 0012af38
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: esi: 00000850 edi: 001991c4 ebp:
0000000e esp: 005aef68
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: ds: 0018 es: 0018 fs: 002b gs: 002b
ss: 0018
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: Process netstat (pid: 4615, process nr:
32, stackpage=005ae000)
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: Stack: 00e51000 00000400 0000a800 002c4620
001991d2
Sep 22 13:28:00 errigle kernel: Code: 8b 48 04 51 0f bf 10 52 8b 40 08 50
8b 8e 7c 89 19 00 51 8b
Anyone got ANY ideas!!!!!! Should I upgrade the kernel and if so to which
version?? Please email me as well as posting so I don't miss out.
On a similar vein another machine (IDE, NE200 clone) gave the same
"eth0: transmit timed out, TX status 0xe, ISR 0x0."
"eth0: Possible network cable problem?"
messages last weekend. The strange thing was it was NOT connected to any
ethernet at the time.....I had it at home!!!!!!
Thanks in advance
Dermot
--
Dermot Bradley
Communications Director
Genesis Project Ltd
bradley@gpl.com
------------------------------
From: manttila@arc.tut.fi (Mikko Anttila)
Subject: Re: Linux on 40,000 FREE(ish) CD's
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 1994 19:05:42 +0300
On which month's issue of PC-PLUS will it be/is it?
--Mikko
--
-- Mikko Anttila
-- Mikrotu(t)kija
-- Tampereen teknillinen korkeakoulu -- Tampere Univ. of Technology
-- Arkkitehtuurin osasto -- Dept of Architecture
------------------------------
** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **
The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:
Internet: Linux-Misc-Request@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU
You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.misc) via:
Internet: Linux-Misc@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU
Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites:
nic.funet.fi pub/OS/Linux
tsx-11.mit.edu pub/linux
sunsite.unc.edu pub/Linux
End of Linux-Misc Digest
******************************