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Re: 386-4 MB startup question



Hello!

At least inside germany, one can send a letter and the recipient has to pay
for the fees if the sender wants him to... I think I'll try to do that and
if don't succeed, I'll pay the few marks, because any sending of money would
almost cost more than the amount you'd have to send to me. Do you want
Debian 2.1 cds or 2.2 ones or both? Do you need any boot disks (perhaps for
a virus-free boot?)?

Regards,

Stephan Hachinger
Plettstr. 73
81735 München
Germany


----- Original Message -----
From: "DSC Lithuania" <dscpubl@silute.omnitel.net>
To: "Stephan Hachinger" <Stephan.Hachinger@gmx.de>
Sent: Saturday, January 20, 2001 8:37 PM
Subject: Re: 386-4 MB startup question


> Actually, probably 8 would be best, just in case there were mismatch
> problems.  (our old
> 4 + your new 4 might cause some kind of mismatch problem, in which case we
> couldn't
> use them.  But getting 8 would prevent that kind of problem.)
>
> Thanks.  Can you give me an address to send payment to?  Also name your
> currency; I can
> probably make the transfer in the proper form without too much trouble
> (probably marks, but
> you might want something different).
>
>     - Michael Rudmin
>       8-4 Laisves Kvartalas
>       5730 Silute,  Lietuva
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Stephan Hachinger <Stephan.Hachinger@gmx.de>
> To: DSC Lithuania <dscpubl@silute.omnitel.net>; Debian User
> <debian-user@lists.debian.org>
> Date: Friday, January 19, 2001 4:38 PM
> Subject: Re: 386-4 MB startup question
>
>
> >Hello!
> >
> >Hmm, as I said, a mass of those modules are just lying around here, so
you
> >have to pay nothing for it... it would be good if you could pay the
> >transport fees (ca. $4 or something like that), and that's it. How many
> >modules do you need?
> >
> >Kind Regards,
> >
> >Stephan Hachinger
> >
> >----- Original Message -----
> >From: "DSC Lithuania" <dscpubl@silute.omnitel.net>
> >To: "Stephan Hachinger" <Stephan.Hachinger@gmx.de>
> >Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2001 9:19 PM
> >Subject: Re: 386-4 MB startup question
> >
> >
> >> >Hello!
> >> >
> >> >The parity message doesn't seem like a real error to me, but exactly
> like
> >> >the behaviour of the parity boot b boot sector virus. What do you
> think??
> >>
> >>
> >> I think since the computer I was transferring files between and this
one
> >> *also*
> >> developed the same error, that you are exactly right.  I've got F-PROT,
> >and
> >> am going to go to war against the virus.  Also, I would appreciate the
> >> memory, if you'd be willing to send it.  And if you are going to ship
the
> >> one, then the Debian 2.2 would also be good.
> >>
> >> Sooner or later (probably the latter)  I expect to really upgrade the
> >memory
> >> and/or motherboard, and when that happens the Debian 2.2 upgrade will
be
> >> ideal.
> >>
> >>     How much would you like for it all?
> >>
> >>     -  Mike Rudmin
> >>        8-4 Laisves Kvartalas
> >>        5730 Silute, Lithuania / Lietuva
> >>
> >>
> >>  V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V v V
v
> V
> >v
> >> V v V v V v V v V v
> >>
> >> Below this line:  My own approximate version of the Lithuanian national
> >> fairy tale.  It would
> >> make an excellent HOWTO   8->  .  Read if you want, ignore if you want.
> >>
> >>
> >> The story of Egle and the snake-king
> >>
> >> Once there lived a girl named Egle.  She lived with her parents, two
> >> sisters, and three brothers.  One day, she and her sisters went
swimming,
> >> and when they were done she discovered that there was a snake in her
> >> clothes.
> >>
> >> Now, this snake was of a kind that is considered to be good luck; but
> >still
> >> Egle wanted her clothes back, so she asked the snake "please give me my
> >> clothes".  The snake replied "I will if you promise to marry me."
Egle,
> >> thinking that this was all a joke, agreed, and the snake left the
> clothes.
> >> She put the clothes on, went home, and told her parents everything that
> >had
> >> happened.
> >>
> >> Several days later, her village was inundated with snakes.  The snakes
> >> approached her parents, and asked for Egle's hand in marriage for their
> >> king.  Egle's father decided to try to give them a duck that was
dressed
> >in
> >> Egle's clothes, and indeed the snakes left with the duck.  However, as
> the
> >> snakes went into the forest, a cuckoo bird said "That's not Egle".  So
> the
> >> snakes took the duck back again, and demanded Egle.
> >>
> >> Again, the father tried to give them a sheep in Egle's clothes.  Again,
> >the
> >> snakes took the sheep, and again the journey was interrupted by the
> cuckoo
> >> bird.  At last, Egle's parents gave their daughter to the snakes, and
the
> >> snakes took Egle to a fabulous palace under the sea.  There, the new
> bride
> >> met her groom, and discovered that he was not a snake, but a magical
and
> >> handsome prince named Zilvinas.  She fell in love at once, and they
were
> >> married.
> >>
> >> Some time passed, and Egle had four children, three boys and one girl.
> >>
> >> After this time, Egle was lonesome for her family, and asked Zilvinas
if
> >she
> >> could visit them.  Now, Zilvinas knew that Egle's family would try to
> kill
> >> him if they could, so he said no.  But she begged so hard that he
> >relented,
> >> but said  "I set before you three tasks.  When you have completed them,
> >you
> >> may visit your family."  The first task was to wear a pair of iron
shoes
> >> until they wore out.  The second task was to make lace without any
yarn.
> >> The third task waa to carry water in a pail full of holes.
> >>
> >> Now, if Egle had done these things herself, and figured them out, she
> >would
> >> have been fine.  But she considered the tasks impossible, and instead
> >asked
> >> an old witch for the answers.  The witch told her how to do each task,
> and
> >> she did them.  Her husband knew that she had cheated; but he had
promised
> >> and was true to his word.  So he said "You may go for seven days only,
> but
> >> the eighth day you must return.  Come to the seashore and call me by
> name,
> >> and I will come to you on waves of milk."
> >>
> >> So Egle went off with her children.
> >>
> >> For seven days she visited her family, and they pressed her to stay.
And
> >> indeed, she missed them so much that she decided "what can one day
hurt?"
> >> But when her family saw that she wanted to stay, they decided that her
> >> marriage to Zilvinas was indeed a mistake.  So her brothers cornered
her
> >> children, and began beating them, asking "how do we call your father,
and
> >> where is he?"
> >>
> >> Now, the child named "Oak" stood strong, and so did his brothers
"Birch"
> >and
> >> "Poplar".  But the youngest, a little girl named "Elm" , was flighty
and
> >> fluttery like  the leaves of the Elm, and her strength was no greater
> than
> >> that of the elm, whose branches shatter at the first storms of winter.
> So
> >> before long, she told the brothers her father's name, and how to call
> him.
> >> Then they went down to the ocean with swords, called him, and slew him.
> >His
> >> body was borne away by sorrowful snakes, and was never seen again.
> >>
> >> But Egle, unaware of what had passed, decided the next day to go home;
> and
> >> went with her children down to the sea.  She called her husband; but
> >instead
> >> of seeing the white foam of milk on the sea, she suddenly saw the sea
> turn
> >> to blood.  And she realized then that her husband had been killed, and
> >asked
> >> her children if they knew what had happened.  Then the children told
her,
> >> and she was overcome with grief; and praying, was turned, along with
her
> >> children, into a tree.  She was turned into a fir tree (Egle), while
the
> >> others were turned into trees of their own namesakes.
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> >--
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> >with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact
> listmaster@lists.debian.org
>



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