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authorKarsten Merker <merker@debian.org>2012-09-16 19:02:51 +0000
committerKarsten Merker <merker@debian.org>2012-09-16 19:02:51 +0000
commit2e3862e12774c3e703775a8d400f0e68ac6a76ba (patch)
tree098f18e9d32d0e69988c9369ead06cf13900b720 /en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml
parenta7041d7bd7eab101dafb6b0c2fab7e2e58c35232 (diff)
downloadinstallation-guide-2e3862e12774c3e703775a8d400f0e68ac6a76ba.zip
manual/en/preparing/bios-setup/i386.xml
manual/en/hardware/hardware-supported.xml manual/en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml Replaced literal quotes ("") by <quote></quote> tags to ensure proper typesetting. Thanks to Holger Wansing for pointing this out.
Diffstat (limited to 'en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml')
-rw-r--r--en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml b/en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml
index a6dd3b144..525dc79ea 100644
--- a/en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml
+++ b/en/hardware/buying-hardware.xml
@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ describing how an operating system and its device drivers communicate with a
certain class of devices. All devices which comply to such a
(de-facto-)standard can be used with a single generic device driver and no
device-specific drivers are required. With some kinds of hardware (e.g.
-USB "Human Interface Devices", i.e. keyboards, mice, etc., and USB mass
+USB <quote>Human Interface Devices</quote>, i.e. keyboards, mice, etc., and USB mass
storage devices like USB flash disks and memory card readers) this works
very well and practically every device sold in the market is
standards-compliant.