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Date:      Tue, 11 Jun 1996 17:57:11 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Doug White <dwhite@riley-net170-164.uoregon.edu>
To:        Steve Schwartz <steve@server.gslink.com>
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: Boot Up
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.91.960611175344.6112C-100000@riley-net170-164.uoregon.edu>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSD/.3.91.960611064223.23188A-100000@server.gslink.com>

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On Tue, 11 Jun 1996, Steve Schwartz wrote:

> > > I have a 486/75Mhz with 
> > > 8mb of ram.  My brothers is a 486/66 8mb ram.  I am confused what is 
> > > going on.  I am going to upgrade my computer to a Pentium 150mhz 16mb ram 
> > > June 20th, but I want to install FreeBSD too much, and can't wait.  I 
> > > think it would be neat to fool around with, and help me at my job. 
> 
> When I stuck the FreeBSD boot disk in my computer just froze.  When I put 
> BSDI's boot disk in got the following message:
> 
> Warning, CMOS geometry for C: is mapped, too many heads
> Mapped Geometry: 63 sectors 64 heads 787 cylinders
> Drive geometry: 63 sectors 16 heads 3148 cylinders

The boot floppy can deal with this.

> I have on my C: a 1.6 Western Digital with 3 partitions.  A 900MB (Win95) 
> 250(Empty for Unix/Linux) and 350(NT4.0)

Any way you roll it you are going to end up with an unbootable 
partition.  All bootable partitions must be completely below 500MB or so.

Doug White                              | University of Oregon  
Internet:  dwhite@resnet.uoregon.edu    | Residence Networking Assistant
http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/~dwhite    | Computer Science Major




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