Both Gnome and KDE has a sort of MSWindows-like device manager. It should be in the Control Panel of KDE.
The KDE one looks exactly like MSWindows panel..
What it sounds like is somebody plugged in those cable-modem routers in backwards. Plug a Nat router in backwards, and you end up with it trying to resolve the internet.
They call these things broadcast storms, as they go through cut-through switching. Either that, or bad hardware on the line...
That's awfully strange. Most mini-pc's made in yesteryear had a 16 bit cardbus for expandable stuff like this.
Do you have a pci/isa slot available? You can get ISA=>PCMCIA or PCI=>PCMCIA adapter.
It all else fails, go with that USB=>PCMCIA adapter. Looks like the only thing that you can use.
Yep, it's got a device manager. It's called a Filesystem, and /dev is all of your devices.
You can control, to a pretty fine grain, who uses what resources and access. Be aware that you control 3d accesses through /etc/X11/XF86Config by setting the DRI priv's.
So what exactly did you have in...
Not seeing everything that you do, it looks like FS coruption.
Now how it could be FS corruption after redhat installed itself correctly is another matter entirely.
I'd go on ahead and re-install, but if this error does come out again, document it fully. Might be suitable of a kernel patch.
That's impossible. Linux is at 2.6.0-test9 , not "version 9".
Perhaps you mean RedHat?
If you could give more information about this, I'm sure we'd be glad to help. Tell us the the system was trying to do before it crashed, what the crash message was, and if you tried to fix it.
If you follow these steps... they should help you get what you want.
1: addgroup tape
2: add users you want to use the tape drive to tape group
3: chown root:tape /dev/st0
4: chmod 770 /dev/st0
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