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authorFrans Pop <elendil@planet.nl>2006-12-27 04:07:33 +0000
committerFrans Pop <elendil@planet.nl>2006-12-27 04:07:33 +0000
commita2c20d4d3d970484eb171139e92bc44181a62e1b (patch)
treea6c56db711f616f23712a92c9d7ab1131253bcf5 /po/pot/preparing.pot
parent190a18225bcf21fc3b92820fc168a31ab06ec0d7 (diff)
downloadinstallation-guide-a2c20d4d3d970484eb171139e92bc44181a62e1b.zip
[SILENT_COMMIT] Update of POT and PO files for the manual
Diffstat (limited to 'po/pot/preparing.pot')
-rw-r--r--po/pot/preparing.pot16
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/po/pot/preparing.pot b/po/pot/preparing.pot
index 7232e9aa4..9f0b9f47f 100644
--- a/po/pot/preparing.pot
+++ b/po/pot/preparing.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: 2006-12-25 20:11+0000\n"
+"POT-Creation-Date: 2006-12-27 04:04+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"
@@ -1067,7 +1067,7 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: preparing.xml:1037
#, no-c-format
-msgid "Windows NT uses the PC-style partition table. If you are manipulating existing FAT or NTFS partitions, it is recommended that you use the native Windows NT tools (or, more conveniently, you can also repartition your disk from the AlphaBIOS setup menu). Otherwise, it is not really necessary to partition from Windows; the Linux partitioning tools will generally do a better job. Note that when you run NT, the Disk Administrator may offer you to write a <quote>harmless signature</quote> on non-Windows disks if you have any. <emphasis>Never</emphasis> let it do that, as this signature will destroy the partition information."
+msgid "Windows NT uses the PC-style partition table. If you are manipulating existing FAT or NTFS partitions, it is recommended that you use the native Windows NT tools (or, more conveniently, you can also repartition your disk from the AlphaBIOS setup menu). Otherwise, it is not really necessary to partition from Windows; the Linux partitioning tools will generally do a better job. Note that when you run NT, the Disk Administrator may offer to write a <quote>harmless signature</quote> on non-Windows disks if you have any. <emphasis>Never</emphasis> let it do that, as this signature will destroy the partition information."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
@@ -1091,7 +1091,7 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: preparing.xml:1076
#, no-c-format
-msgid "But if you have a large IDE disk, and are using neither LBA addressing, overlay drivers (sometimes provided by hard disk manufacturers), nor a new (post 1998) BIOS that supports large disk access extensions, then you must locate your Debian boot partition carefully. In this case, you will have to put the boot partition into the first 1024 cylinders of your hard drive (usually around 524 megabytes, without BIOS translation). This may require that you move an existing FAT or NTFS partition."
+msgid "But if you have a large IDE disk, and are not using LBA addressing, overlay drivers (sometimes provided by hard disk manufacturers), or a new (post 1998) BIOS that supports large disk access extensions, then you must locate your Debian boot partition carefully. In this case, you will have to put the boot partition into the first 1024 cylinders of your hard disk (usually around 524 megabytes, without BIOS translation). This may require that you move an existing FAT or NTFS partition."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: title
@@ -1253,7 +1253,7 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: preparing.xml:1301
#, no-c-format
-msgid "For IDE based Macs, you need to use <command>Apple Drive Setup</command> to create empty space for the Linux partitions, and complete the partitioning under Linux, or use the MacOS version of pdisk available from the MkLinux FTP server."
+msgid "For IDE based Macs, you need to use <command>Apple Drive Setup</command> to create empty space for the Linux partitions, and complete the partitioning under Linux, or use the MacOS version of pdisk available for download from <ulink url=\"http://homepage.mac.com/alk/downloads/pdisk.sit.hqx\">Alsoft</ulink>."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: title
@@ -1265,7 +1265,7 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: preparing.xml:1319
#, no-c-format
-msgid "It's perfectly fine to partition from SunOS; in fact, if you intend to run both SunOS and Debian on the same machine, it is recommended that you partition using SunOS prior to installing Debian. The Linux kernel understands Sun disk labels, so there are no problems there. Just make sure you leave room for the Debian root partition within the first 1GB area of the boot disk. You can also place the kernel image on a UFS partition if that is easier than putting the root partition there. SILO supports booting Linux and SunOS from either EXT2 (Linux), UFS (SunOS), romfs and iso9660 (CDROM) partitions."
+msgid "It's perfectly fine to partition from SunOS; in fact, if you intend to run both SunOS and Debian on the same machine, it is recommended that you partition using SunOS prior to installing Debian. The Linux kernel understands Sun disk labels, so there are no problems there. Just make sure you leave room for the Debian root partition within the first 1GB area of the boot disk. You can also place the kernel image on a UFS partition if that is easier than putting the root partition there. SILO supports booting Linux and SunOS from any of EXT2 (Linux), UFS (SunOS), romfs or iso9660 (CDROM) partitions."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: title
@@ -1739,7 +1739,7 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: preparing.xml:1965
#, no-c-format
-msgid "Before you actually perform an installation, you have to go over some design and preparation steps. IBM has made documentation available about the whole process, e.g. how to prepare an installation medium and how actually boot from that medium. Duplicating that information here is neither possible nor necessary. However, we will describe here which kind of Debian-specific data is needed and where do you find them. Based on both sources of information you have to prepare your machine and the installation medium and to perform a boot from it. When you see the welcome message in your client session join this document again for the Debian-specific installation steps."
+msgid "Before you actually perform an installation, you have to go over some design and preparation steps. IBM has made documentation available about the whole process, e.g. how to prepare an installation medium and how actually to boot from that medium. Duplicating that information here is neither possible nor necessary. However, we will describe here which kind of Debian-specific data is needed and where to find it. Using both sources of information you have to prepare your machine and the installation medium do you can perform a boot from it. When you see the welcome message in your client session, return to this document to go through the Debian-specific installation steps."
msgstr ""
#. Tag: title
@@ -1901,12 +1901,12 @@ msgstr ""
#. Tag: title
#: preparing.xml:2163
#, no-c-format
-msgid "Display visibility on OldWorld Powermacs"
+msgid "Display-visibility on OldWorld Powermacs"
msgstr ""
#. Tag: para
#: preparing.xml:2164
#, no-c-format
-msgid "Some OldWorld Powermacs, most notably those with the <quote>control</quote> display driver but possibly others as well, may not produce a colormap with reliably results in visible output under Linux when the display is configured for more than 256 colors. If you are experiencing such issues with your display after rebooting (you can sometimes see data on the monitor, but on other occasions cannot see anything) or, if the screen turns black after booting the installer instead of showing you the user interface, try changing your display settings under MacOS to use 256 colors instead of <quote>thousands</quote> or <quote>millions</quote>."
+msgid "Some OldWorld Powermacs, most notably those with the <quote>control</quote> display driver, may not reliable produce a colormap under Linux when the display is configured for more than 256 colors. If you are experiencing such issues with your display after rebooting (you can sometimes see data on the monitor, but on other occasions cannot see anything) or, if the screen turns black after booting the installer instead of showing you the user interface, try changing your display settings under MacOS to use 256 colors instead of <quote>thousands</quote> or <quote>millions</quote>."
msgstr ""