Anyways, I was wondering how the boot sector was written to the partition, and now I know (mostly).
In the procedure, one line reads "Boot sector kernel name set to KERNEL SYS."
Would this be comparable with kernel loading in Grub? With Grub, does the system partition still require a boot sector if Grub is essentially loading the kernel, which will take care of the rest of the booting when it is loaded? (< this second question is a guess).
I do not know how to load a kernel through Grub, though it appears that Grub is doing the work of a boot sector.
Just wanted to get this little bit of ambiguity out of my mind.
Thanks
Yellow Dog was a Red Hat fork for the Mac. I think it still exists in some form or another, but it'd be Red Hattish. And if that were what you want, rather try Fedora. Or CentOS. Or blag.
My Dad has acquired many great records over the years, and this is one of them. Released in 1977, this has got to be one of the most played records in the house, ever. Probably the most played 7" single. It is this:
From Thread: Whatever.... Wed Jan 6, 2010 8:00:45 PM
Hi Pikachu!
I'm really really really sorry for what happened today.
I know I was kinda adding onto the fire by making that stupid little giggle of mine.
Never forget that I love you.
^-^
Not so long ago I was listening to some of my sister's My Bloody Valentine vinyl.
It was pretty good.
I was shocked that it came out in 1993 though.
That tiem for music was the shit.
I also use a Laser Mouse, It has a sleek and stylish design that looks great on my desktop, and it delivering unmatched precision and control on virtually any surface. Most of all, it is a gaming laser mouse. It respons fast when i'm gaming.