summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/po/pot/hardware.pot
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorFrans Pop <elendil@planet.nl>2007-01-06 19:08:19 +0000
committerFrans Pop <elendil@planet.nl>2007-01-06 19:08:19 +0000
commit2bb043ffe116ab9f82610ab679782e98eb348a5d (patch)
tree18bb68efcbf7d83e7c3c8770297aa76d435afa7c /po/pot/hardware.pot
parent1b23aa6f59074ad8031e1d1dc4ba69fb73994c31 (diff)
downloadinstallation-guide-2bb043ffe116ab9f82610ab679782e98eb348a5d.zip
[SILENT_COMMIT] Update of POT and PO files for the manual
Diffstat (limited to 'po/pot/hardware.pot')
-rw-r--r--po/pot/hardware.pot8
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/po/pot/hardware.pot b/po/pot/hardware.pot
index b5fbab8a1..1cac6b345 100644
--- a/po/pot/hardware.pot
+++ b/po/pot/hardware.pot
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ msgid ""
msgstr ""
"Project-Id-Version: PACKAGE VERSION\n"
"Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: debian-boot@lists.debian.org\n"
-"POT-Creation-Date: 2007-01-02 23:42+0000\n"
+"POT-Creation-Date: 2007-01-06 19:06+0000\n"
"PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n"
"Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>\n"
"Language-Team: LANGUAGE <LL@li.org>\n"
@@ -2594,13 +2594,13 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: hardware.xml:1744
#, no-c-format
-msgid "The X.Org X11 window system is only supported on the SGI Indy and the O2. The Broadcom BCM91250A and BCM91480B evaluation boards have standard 3.3v PCI slots and support VGA emulation or Linux framebuffer on a selected range of graphics cards. A <ulink url=\"&url-bcm91250a-hardware;\">compatibility listing</ulink> for Broadcom evaluation boards is available."
+msgid "The X.Org X Window System is only supported on the SGI Indy and the O2. The Broadcom BCM91250A and BCM91480B evaluation boards have standard 3.3v PCI slots and support VGA emulation or Linux framebuffer on a selected range of graphics cards. A <ulink url=\"&url-bcm91250a-hardware;\">compatibility listing</ulink> for Broadcom evaluation boards is available."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: hardware.xml:1753
#, no-c-format
-msgid "The X.Org X11 window system is supported on some DECstation models. The Broadcom BCM91250A and BCM91480B evaluation boards have standard 3.3v PCI slots and support VGA emulation or Linux framebuffer on a selected range of graphics cards. A <ulink url=\"&url-bcm91250a-hardware;\">compatibility listing</ulink> for Broadcom evaluation boards is available."
+msgid "The X.Org X Window System is supported on some DECstation models. The Broadcom BCM91250A and BCM91480B evaluation boards have standard 3.3v PCI slots and support VGA emulation or Linux framebuffer on a selected range of graphics cards. A <ulink url=\"&url-bcm91250a-hardware;\">compatibility listing</ulink> for Broadcom evaluation boards is available."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
@@ -3038,7 +3038,7 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: hardware.xml:2338
#, no-c-format
-msgid "You should avoid Windows-specific hardware for two reasons. The first is that the manufacturers do not generally make the resources available to write a Linux driver. Generally, the hardware and software interface to the device is proprietary, and documentation is not available without a non-disclosure agreement, if it is available at all. This precludes its being used for free software, since free software writers disclose the source code of their programs. The second reason is that when devices like these have had their embedded processors removed, the operating system must perform the work of the embedded processors, often at <emphasis>real-time</emphasis> priority, and thus the CPU is not available to run your programs while it is driving these devices. Since the typical Windows user does not multi-process as intensively as a Linux user, the manufacturers hope that the Windows user simply won't notice the burden this hardware places on their CPU. However, any multi-processing operating system, even Windows 2000 or XP, suffers from degraded performance when peripheral manufacturers skimp on the embedded processing power of their hardware."
+msgid "You should avoid Windows-specific hardware for two reasons. The first is that the manufacturers do not generally make the resources available to write a Linux driver. Generally, the hardware and software interface to the device is proprietary, and documentation is not available without a non-disclosure agreement, if it is available at all. This precludes it being used for free software, since free software writers disclose the source code of their programs. The second reason is that when devices like these have had their embedded processors removed, the operating system must perform the work of the embedded processors, often at <emphasis>real-time</emphasis> priority, and thus the CPU is not available to run your programs while it is driving these devices. Since the typical Windows user does not multi-process as intensively as a Linux user, the manufacturers hope that the Windows user simply won't notice the burden this hardware places on their CPU. However, any multi-processing operating system, even Windows 2000 or XP, suffers from degraded performance when peripheral manufacturers skimp on the embedded processing power of their hardware."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: para