[ale] How do I install 32 bit SuSe 9.3 on a 64 bit system?
Jim Lynch
ale_nospam at fayettedigital.com
Thu Oct 13 16:25:13 EDT 2005
Thanks for all the tips. I really don't want 64 bit. It's too new and
I'm not really using this for anything that needs 64 bits. In fact,
since I write software for 32 bit systems, it would be more trouble to
do it on a 64 bit platform. I did find that one of the initial menus
has a pretty well hidden menu at the bottom that say "F6 64Bit" I hit
F6 and sure enough I had a menu option to set it to 32 bits. 2 hours
later I have a running SuSe 9.3 laptop. X looks crappy, but it's at
least displaying something unlike Debian. It will do for now until I
can crank up sax and see if I can get it to do a bit more. I've see a
few comments on the web about drivers for this thing for accelerated 2
and 3 D displays, but unless that's the only way to get better
resolution, I'll not bother.
Thanks,
Jim.
Jim Lynch wrote:
>I've got this new Presario with a 64 bit AMD chip. I installed Debian
>on it, but never could get X configured. I've always had better luck
>with SuSe on unusual hardware so I installed 9.3. Unfortunately it
>installed a 64 bit kernel and other assorted 64 bit programs, but it
>won't boot. Now I'm trying to go back and install a 32 bit kernel and
>can't figure out how to tell it to do just that. It insists on
>installing a 64 bit kernel. I looked in the packages but there isn't a
>package listed anywhere that suggests it is linux or kernel or whatever.
>
>Any suggestions would be welcome. I'm staring at the Yast screen,
>"Installations settings" right now. I'm booting from a minimal cdrom
>and doing a network install.
>
>Thanks,
>Jim.
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