Agreed, and now there is *NO* choice in some cases to not use
"plug and play".
>> A good Example are the new Teles 1.3 ISDN Cards. You can configure them
>> only under Windows or dos, and you can only stick two of them in one system
>> cause they have only 2 config-ports.
>>
>But thats a fault of Teles. Non PnP soft config works well with the 3com
>enet cards. Again, a good resource manager should do the best it can
>with the hardware at hand.
Agreed. They ought to have known better - and then people
shouldn't buy such junk, and force them to change.
(Note: Obviously Teles didn't intend the ISDN cards to be
used in a server requiring multiple lines. Somebody bought
a product intended for a different market and/or a different use.)
>> Of course PNP is very helpfull (Eisa, MCA, PCI) if it works right... the
>> question is... does it work right? :)
>>
>This is the big question. I am only concerned with linux for now so if
>PnP for linux works well I dont care if Win95 is a "disaster".
>We have the option to disable PnP with a jumper and then we have a
>"simi" soft config. The config port is jumpered in that case but the dual
>port ram and irq is soft config via the jumpered i/o.
>
>Regards,
>Mike Kilburn
At least *somebody* understands! :-)
-- Andrew E. Mileski --
--------------------------------------------------------------
mailto:dmtech@magi.com http://www.redhat.com/~aem/
"The best programmers are lazy", so I'm told.
I haven't gotten around to seeing if it is true or not though.