Check out the Linux Terminal Server Project at www.ltsp.org/ Also, as I understand it, your BIOS will probably recognize hard drives larger than the 1024 cylinder limit, but your /boot partition must be completely contained below that limit on a larger hard drive. By partitioning a larger disk you will be able to use an older machine. On my debian box here, a 40 gb drive is partitioned like so: /dev/hda2 327 MB / /dev/hda1 15 MB /boot /dev/hda3 2.8 GB /usr /dev/hda6 33 GB /var /dev/hda4 is a logical, not a primary partition. /dev/hda5 is my swap partition. When I installed RH9 a couple of months ago, it wanted at least 100 MB on its /boot partition. I'm not completely familiar with LBA and this limitation of older BIOS's, but as I understand it, this sort of partitioning scheme is a work-around to this issue. -- Hugh Esco At 11:20 PM 8/11/03 -0500, you wrote: >Hi all. > >Well, the box on which I did my debian install had its hard drive die, >which probably explains some of the weird problems I posted about >during the install. > >Anyway, this machine is a AMD k5 133 MHz, with 40 mb of ram. Since >the hd was a 1.2 GB, and since I very much doubt this motherboard can >take anything higher then 2 GB, replacing the hd isn't an option. > >Since this box still has a working 3c905c card, I thought I could use >it as a dumb terminal. So, does anyone know of a distro designed for >booting over the network? >Thanks. > >Greg > > >-- >Free domains: http://www.eu.org/ or mail dns-manager at EU.org > > >_______________________________________________ >Speakup mailing list >Speakup at braille.uwo.ca >http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup