Originally posted by: zayened
ok....i'm actually getting somewhere now....
i have a driver that only works with kernel 4.2, yet i have 4.3. I downloaded 4.2, and it says i have to use "make -f Makefile.Linux all" but it tells me "make is not a recognized command." how do i get make to be recognized???
Originally posted by: P0ldy
Kopete handles AIM and MSN.
And nobody's going to help you. You obviously haven't read much, give no specifics about your kernel, hardware, etc.
Originally posted by: nutxo
Originally posted by: P0ldy
Kopete handles AIM and MSN.
And nobody's going to help you. You obviously haven't read much, give no specifics about your kernel, hardware, etc.
Bwhaha, I tried SuSE liek 4 years, ran it for a while, it had like a 400 page manual with it :Q
Originally posted by: P0ldy
Kopete handles AIM and MSN.
And nobody's going to help you. You obviously haven't read much, give no specifics about your kernel, hardware, etc.
I think most oss users are more than willing to help, linuxquestions.org for example, but only help those who help themselves. I'm a newb to Linux too, but asking for help is usually preceded by many other investigations.Originally posted by: Infohawk
Originally posted by: P0ldy
Kopete handles AIM and MSN.
And nobody's going to help you. You obviously haven't read much, give no specifics about your kernel, hardware, etc.
You can find help some places, but this attitude is prevalent in open source circles in my experience.
It's sounds like you are invested in suse but I think it's best to start with a nitty-gritty distro like slackware, gentoo, or even debian. Why? Because you will learn things just getting the system started that will pay off when you try to do things like use winex. As far as I can tell, NO oss distros are problem-free. The hand-holding distros can give you trouble at the point a problem pops up because you won't have the tools to fix the problem yourself or find help. What are the tools? In my experience, mainly research. Keeping an OSS system up to date requires finding solutions most of the time in newsgroups, mailing lists, and IRC (with lots of care because IRC folks can be jerks).
1) We can't see that page - it's members-only. 2) Any video drivers for Linux should almost certainly be taken from the manufacturer's web site. Which brings us to an important question - what kind of video card do you have?Originally posted by: zayened
I have a video driver, more specifically this one.
That's not a kernel version - the current common kernels are 2.4 and 2.6. 4.2 is an X11 version (X11=graphics subsystem). 4.2 is somewhat old at this point. The fact that your download is using anything from X4.2 suggests that the driver may be outdated. Tell us what kind of card you have and we'll tell you where to look.i tried to ./install.sh it, but after i hit the enter to continue button, it tells me that it only works with kernel 4.2...
I highly doubt that any of this should be necessary. But again, without knowing your hardware, it's hard to tell.which i also got from this site. here is the specific text...
Kernel Modules
You can download the Linux kernel modules for XFree86 4.2.x at [WWW]http://www.xfree86.org/~alanh.
Note that the binary modules only work against a 2.4 kernel; 2.6 users will have to build their own.
Linux kernel modules for subsequent versions of XFree86 can be found in the XFree86 source tree in the directory xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/os-support/linux/drm
As above, I really doubt this should be necessary. However, if you wanted to install a package like make, you would need to find an RPM either on your CD's or from SuSe's site. If YaST doesn't seem to do anything, put the file in your home directory, open a terminal, su to root, and do an rpm -Uvh make.blah-blah-blah.rpmnow, i downloaded kernal 4.2, and it has a Makefile.Linux file in it, which means i have to "make -f Makefile.Linux all", but the make package is not installed on my system. Now, I found a make package and downloaded it, but when i click on "install with YaST," it just opens yast and then quickly closes it, no install occuring.
why i wont use suse again
Why would I support a company that fels this way about me?
Originally posted by: Nothinman
why i wont use suse again
Why would I support a company that feels this way about me?
Huh?