Eberhard Roloff wrote:
Per Jessen wrote:
Richard Creighton wrote:
I cranked up 10.2 on a 486DX-2 the other day just to see it run...slow, but it ran :)
How exactly did you manage that? Have you got a 486-version of 10.2?
I've got a 486DX2 machine running as firewall/gateway, but it's stuck on SuSE 7.1 - I would certainly be interested in getting it upgraded to 10.2. The 256Mb yast memory requirement might be a problem, but I'm sure I'll find a way around that.
/Per Jessen, Zürich
imho, for this machine, you are MUCH better off by using ipcop.
kind regards Eberhard
This machine was a junker and I put a 'pull' drive that had an already installed minimum install of 10.2 and lo and behold, it actually ran. Don't ask me how :) I wasn't really expecting anything except maybe the bios (if I was lucky) messages. Would it have installed from a CD? Dunno, probably not but this was from a drive that already had an installation on it from earler experiments and a self-compiled kernel about a year ago, I guess. It only ran for about 10 min before it froze (heat) which is why I now remember I pulled it in the first place, but it was an interesting experiment non-the-less, and does illustrate the 'Linux runs on junk as well as modern machines'. Hell, Linux is running in my TIVO Direct-TV DVR right now and probably my washing machine :) I went through a McDonalds/Wendys/BurgerKing (don't wanna prejudice anyone) drive up ordering podium to place an order....It was running Windows...It had the Blue Screen of Death displayed....I laughed my (four letter word for posterior) off! I don't support that chain anymore :) Richard -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org