-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: RIPEMD160 I have an old Toshiba laptop Satelite 300 with a wappin' 32 megs of memory with a 266 MHz processor. Slackware runs fine on it but I thought I would try to install Debian Lenny on it but I can't get speakup to come up at all. Is there a chance that Debian's kernels just don't work on this little pup? I tried the usual procedure with both a full CD for I386 and the netinst disk for I386 downloaded today and I did the down arrow once followed by tab then 'speakup.synth=spkout'. The disk cycled up at the appropriate times but silence. I verified that this disk and procedure work on another machine and it talked OK. I even tried an additional option of 'fb=false' thinking maybe it were a framebuffer. Still no go. I experimented once by specifying 'console=ttyS0,9600,n,8' and listened to see if the Speakout would talk at all and sure enough, it did. It appeared to me that the kernel actually came up but there was a lot of stray characters (probably for terminal control or something) but it proved to me that the kernel appears to boot and my serial connection to the laptop is good. So after all this messing around, is Debian too big for my laptop? I guess I could keep on with Slackware as that still works fine. I was just thinking I would begin to switch all my boxen over to Debian. Any ideas? -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.9 (GNU/Linux) iEYEAREDAAYFAkkc764ACgkQWSjv55S0LfG4xgCfdkjhd1P6uUSFIRjNsBpOqq7k Lp8AoLRXm9w3wTCFWjnAp1PeqCYL8zuT =q5jz -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----