Sat, 18 Aug 2007, by jdarnold@buddydog.org:
Brandon Carl wrote:
Don't be. When I've had problems like this, it almost always turned out to be hardware. I'd check memory first. Let memtest86 run for a while
I'm not familiar with memtest86, how would I run it?
Download the Ultimate Boot CD, burn it, boot from it, and select Memtest. You can find it here:
UBCD has many usefull programs, so it's definitely worth having, but if OP just wants to use memtest86 then he can get it directly from http://www.memtest86.com/memtest86-3.2.tar.gz Unpack this file and follow the directions in the README file to make a bootable memtest86 floppy (make; make install). Theo -- Theo v. Werkhoven Registered Linux user# 99872 http://counter.li.org ICBM 52 13 26N , 4 29 47E. + ICQ: 277217131 SUSE 10.2 + Jabber: muadib@jabber.xs4all.nl Kernel 2.6.20 + See headers for PGP/GPG info. Claimer: any email I receive will become my property. Disclaimers do not apply. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org