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Mike Bilow wrote: > > You have two options. Personally, I would prefer to install Linux using a > 3.5-to-2.5 disk adapter. These are available for about $5-15 and allow > connecting a 2.5-inch notebook hard drive to a standard desktop IDE > controller designed to mate with 3.5-inch hard drives. > > However, for regular installation of software and so forth, you really > need a PCMCIA CD-ROM drive. The ideal type is one which uses an IDE > controller for the PCMCIA card, and most of the really cheap ones (such as > my I/O Magic MCD540) work this way. If the notebook is your only computer, this is true. If you also have a desktop system, though, you have another choice - network installation. A Linux-compatible PCMCIA Ethernet card (most of them these days) plus an Ethernet card for the desktop system will do the trick. Then you mount the CD-ROM on your desktop system, export it via NFS, and mount it on the notebook. The Red Hat and SuSE Linux installers (and probably other distributions as well) even support installing Linux that way. -- Mark J. Dulcey mark at buttery.org Visit my house's home page: http://www.buttery.org/ Visit my home page: http://www.buttery.org/markpoly/ - Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" on the first line of the message body to discuss-request at blu.org (Subject line is ignored).
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