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Date:      Wed, 1 May 1996 15:53:12 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Doug White <dwhite@riley-net170-164.uoregon.edu>
To:        Nate Williams <nate@sri.MT.net>
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: Hello
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.91.960501152332.12245B-100000@riley-net170-164.uoregon.edu>
In-Reply-To: <199605011801.MAA07508@rocky.sri.MT.net>

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On Wed, 1 May 1996, Nate Williams wrote:

> I started the mobile mailing list, and have yet to post to it. :(

Dooh!

> That's the problem with having 3 development branches I guess.

'Tis.  

> 
> > My remaining question is, although it may be moot in a couple of months
> > with 2.1.x, what are 2.1-R people supposed to do for PCMCIA support?
> 
> That's a fair question, and here's the answer which you aren't going to
> like.
> 
> It depends.  What are your desires?  Do you want to help, or just get a
> 'working' system?
> 
> If you just want a working system, then get the Nomad stuff and apply it
> to 2.1R, until I make my patch-set against -stable.

Or the 0323-SNAP.  

I'd run more current versions, but I don't have my confidence up yet that 
I could pull the upgrade successfully (and I don't have the diskspace).  

> Note, Hosokawa already told me that the next release will contain some
> stuff that is very destabilizing w/regards to combining APM and PC-CARD
> support.  But, that won't matter since the Nomad's are no longer support
> 2.1, so you won't have patches anyway.  Hopefully the old release will
> be kept around, but if not then there is *NOTHING* for a 2.1R user to do
> except upgrade to -current.

2.1 is falling too far behind, it looks like. 

> OR, if you want to help out (please!), you can do one of a couple of
> things, but all involve getting the Nomad patches.

I'd love to, but I barely know how to program C, much less do any Unix 
hacking.  :(  I'm only a freshman at the UO, so it'll be some time before 
I could contribute anything useful.  

> Either upgrade to -current and test out the code (w/out the Nomad
> patches), and then add the Nomad patches if necessary.  This will help
> me out more than you know in that it tests the kernel functionality of
> both the APM and PC-CARD code, which is pretty much stable as of now.
> If your card's not supported, you should be able to add in just the
> driver (and entry into /etc/pccard.conf) from the Nomad's patchset and
> see if that's enough.

That would be the extent of my ability, and then I have to get -current 
on the laptop in the first place.  

> This may sound a bit nasty, but if you aren't interested in helping me
> test and get the FreeBSD laptop support working better, you may as well
> run Linux where it already works pretty well.

The current support works.  I'm happy.  If it could work better, that's 
for you guys to decide.  

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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