Author Topic: PLUG AND PLAY?  (Read 735 times)

cahult

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PLUG AND PLAY?
« on: 26 March 2002, 06:11 »
Just wondering, why are there still people touting M
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badkarma

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PLUG AND PLAY?
« Reply #1 on: 26 March 2002, 19:56 »
Why do you think the most commonly used nickname is Plug & Pray?  :D
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Calum

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PLUG AND PLAY?
« Reply #2 on: 26 March 2002, 20:37 »
well as far as i understand with linux, a distribution will include all the most used drivers that are available, for any and all hardware devices (which is a lot) with the latest distro. Then you can compile the kernel yourself if you wish, to remove support for any hardware devices you don't have, if you feel the need to save a few kilobytes of space.
The effect though is that you rarely need worry about whether a device is plug and play or whatever, because it usually works just fine, due to most harware support being already compiled in by default without the user needing to even know what compiling is.
There are quite a few exceptions though from what i read, and every distro has a different idea of what drivers to include as default and what ones to leave out, but hey, that's just life...
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jtpenrod

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PLUG AND PLAY?
« Reply #3 on: 27 March 2002, 00:16 »
quote:
No interferance from a feature which tells you new hardware has been detected and is added to the system

Actually, that isn't completely true. Both Red Hat and Mandrake include "kudzu" that does just that. During boot-up, these distros do indeed auto-detect changes in hardware, then run kudzu to let you decide what you want to do: add, remove, ignore, or do nothing.
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