Fun with Mini-ITX
2003-02-24 08:08 amSo I have the little motherboard I bought last week up and running in a breadboard configuration: almost literally; it's currently attached to a 12-inch piece of 1x8 with drywall screws. The power supply and disk drive are currently sitting loose on the board. The main objective of the breadboarding exercise was to do space planning for a smaller case, e.g an 8-inch cube.
RedHat 7.3 is now happily installed, and I'm now adding the Planet CCRMA audio stuff. The only problems were a bad CD-ROM drive (could have sworn I'd written a note on the bad one...) and a flaky RAM (what do you expect at $20 for 256Mb; fortunately I bought two).
We'll see how it's doing when I get home from work tonight. Then I'll install the rest of the audio stuff, and maybe wrap a few more pieces of wood around it.
RedHat 7.3 is now happily installed, and I'm now adding the Planet CCRMA audio stuff. The only problems were a bad CD-ROM drive (could have sworn I'd written a note on the bad one...) and a flaky RAM (what do you expect at $20 for 256Mb; fortunately I bought two).
We'll see how it's doing when I get home from work tonight. Then I'll install the rest of the audio stuff, and maybe wrap a few more pieces of wood around it.
no subject
Date: 2003-02-25 04:47 pm (UTC)As far as favouring Debian or Red Hat, in recent years I've been a SuSE user... so I guess either one is a switch for me :) (Last time I was running RH was early in the 5.x releases, as I recall, and before that was Slackware.)
I'll have to play with these (in my copious free time, of course.)
no subject
Date: 2003-02-25 07:30 pm (UTC)The cool thing about apt-get is that you can set up a list of sources, and it takes the most recent version from all of them. So you can install from a CD and then update just what changed since the CD was burned.