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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Installing FreeBSD on old system? Post 45288 by auswipe on Wednesday 17th of December 2003 02:19:02 PM
Old 12-17-2003
Re: Installing FreeBSD on old system?

Quote:
Originally posted by MadProfessor
I've never had trouble installing freebsd or any linux/unix system on any computer i've tried to do it on. I just recently aquired a Packard Bell, 75mhz Pentium, 482 i believe. Im having difficulty installing it. I have FreeBSD 5.1 on cd and the computer wont even recognize the cd on boot, so it wont launch the x-install program like it usually does. Is there anyway i can tell this computer to boot from cd?? it is not even an option in the bios settings.
It sounds like you are running on some seriously out of date hardware.

You can install FreeBSD via FTP if you have a broadband connection. I wouldn't suggest trying with dial-up. Smilie You should be able to install other Linux distribution via FTP as well.

You also might be able to add some boot-up parameters to get support for your CD-Drive. To do this, you will need to crack open your case and get the model number of your CD-Rom drive and controller (if non SCSI/IDE drive) and perform some basic research on the supported hardware for FreeBSD and Linux distributions.

Good Luck!
 

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MANCALA(6)							   Games Manual 							MANCALA(6)

NAME
mancala - simple board game for human player and computer SYNOPSIS
mancala level-top level-bottom number-of-stones xmancala [-stones N] mancala-text DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the mancala and xmancala commands. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the original program does not have a manual page. mancala runs the game in the console, while xmancala is a fancy X-interface. mancala-text is a shell script to run mancala in a console from the Debian menu system. When run as xmancala the program has no options, and should be self-explanatory. Built in buttons and sliders control the difficulty level (default 4), and bring up the rules of the game. The console version, mancala, has no access to the rules, and the difficulty level can only be set on the command line (see below). When it is your turn to play, you enter the letter of the cell that you want to move the stones from, A to F (case insensitive). The rules are contained in the file /usr/share/doc/mancala/RULES. OPTIONS
When run as mancala, the program normally takes two arguments, level-top and level-bottom, one of which should be 0 to represent the human player (you), and the other should be in the range 1 to 9, to represent the skill level of the computer player. The first argument repre- sents the top player, who starts. Alternatively, you can give a single argument or two non-zero arguments, to watch the computer playing itself, or two zero arguments, to play against another human player on the same console. For the console version, you can add a third argument to specify the number of stones per hole. For xmancala you can specify the number of stones per hole using the -stones N argument. On Debian systems, the shell script mancala-text is provided to facilitate running mancala in a console, from the Debian menu system. This script will run mancala with a difficulty level of 4, and will pause when the game is finished, to enable the player to view the final screen. SEE ALSO
<http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mancala> AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Andrew Gray <ajpg@debian.org> for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). 13 March 2001 MANCALA(6)
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