Alan Dayley wrote: > Test your memory. I had bad RAM in a system a couple of years ago. It > manifested as weird problems and hangs and then difficulty booting, etc. > The biggest headache of the adventure was the slow corruption of the > hard drive file system resulting in the loss of some data. > > Because Linux actually makes full use of your systems resources, it uses > all you RAM and expects RAM to perform correctly. Windows is far more > "quietly tolerant" of RAM errors even though the RAM will continue to > corrupt things under that OS too. At least that has been my experience. > > Boot a Linux install CD and choose the memory test option. Let it run > at least a full pass. Any error at all can be a problem for the OS and > you should remove the offending module to run with less RAM or replace it. > > Alan Uuummm, and if one doesn't have the memtest option? In the past two weeks I've tried to install Xandros twice, Fedora Core 6 twice, Kubuntu twice, and Fedora 7 once (and upgraded once.) I didn't see a memory test mentioned. ???? Bob Eaton --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss