--7JfCtLOvnd9MIVvH Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable On Fri, Nov 02, 2001 at 12:19:24AM -0700, Richard L. Proctor wrote: > On Thursday 01 November 2001 10:53 pm, you wrote: > > okay i had an old p1 133 mhz computer and i couldn't get linux installe= d on > > it for some reason(hardware related) and EBo was gonna help me out with= it > > but something unfortunate happened to that box :( My friend hooked me up > > with another box it also has a p1 133 mhz and i dont know what board it > > has, but i cant get linux installed on this either, most of the hardwar= e is > > same as old one(HDD, ram, floppy, cdrom, NIC, sound, video etc...). So = my > > question is does anyone know where i can get some old hardware that will > > work in this box that will work with linux, i am pretty sure it has > > something to do with either the HD or the video card. okay i just > > remembered this one utility that inventorys your pc and tells you > > everything so i will list the important stuff. > > > > main circuit board: BIOS: Award Software 4.50PG 09/07/95 > > video: S3 Trio32/64 PCI (732/764) [Display adapter] > > HDD: Generic IDE hard disk drive (2.15 GB) -- drive 0 - i happen to rem= eber > > this being a fujitsu but i cant remember which model > > > > if anyone knows why those wouldn't work or where i can get stuff to rep= lace > > them(cheaply if possible) i would appreciate it. BTW so far i have trie= d to > > install SuSE, mandrake, and zipslack and bigslack >=20 > Try RedHat Well... that's a rather counterproductive statement, isn't it? He's having problems with the Linux kernel and/or a hardware device -- not the distribution. Trying yet another distribution won't have much of a difference, I'll wager. Besdies, he's tried zipslack and bigslack (typicially v2.0 to v2.2 of the Linux kernel), and SuSE and Mandrake (typicially v2.2 to v2.4 of the Linux kernel), which would logicially prove that it's a hardware issue, NOT a software issue. So... My suggestion is that you pull out all non-essential parts from the computer and attempt to boot one of the distros -- doesn't matter which one, as long as it doesn't reboot, you'll know it's one of the cards you pulled out. If it does the same rebooting thing, chances are it's a core part of the system hardware. It sounds to me like it's awfully like a memory problem. Try downloading a memory testing program (memtest86 comes to mind) and checking it. One question: is this a hand-built machine, or a prebuilt one? If it's prebuilt, what is the model number and manufacturer of the machine? --=20 Thomas "Mondoshawan" Tate phoenix@psy.ed.asu.edu http://tank.dyndns.org --7JfCtLOvnd9MIVvH Content-Type: application/pgp-signature Content-Disposition: inline -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE74tBHYp5mUsPGjjwRAidEAJ9lHAHvgfJK7ZniDcYqqZqeRZ7UPwCgja6/ U4RwsJ90o9jNk7in4kUXc3U= =1ZbT -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --7JfCtLOvnd9MIVvH--