Really, my CPU is an Intel Pentium 4 D. It's a newer Dual Core Pentium 3.0Ghz processor. I'm running Fedora FC4 x86_64 and FC5t2 x86_64. My friend has an older Pentium ( II I think ). I'd like to load a hard disk for him with Fedora 32bit so all he has to do is replace his hard drive. I just need to know if a fresh install from my machine onto a hard drive ( that I install on my machine for the install ) will likely run when he installs it into his. His machine has a pretty plain vanilla IDE interface, as does this drive. Thanks Todd > -----Original Message----- > From: Anne Wilson [mailto:cannewilson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Thursday, February 2, 2006 05:27 PM > To: 'For users of Fedora Core releases' > Subject: Re: Generic Install > > On Thursday 02 Feb 2006 16:45, tsimi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > My mistake, > > > > I have a Pentium 4 D > > > > Thanks > > Todd > > > > > On Wed, 2006-02-01 at 21:52 +0000, tsimi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > >>Hi, > > >> > > >>I have a friend that is using a box I setup for him several years > > >> ago with RedHat 7.2. I think he would really like FC and would > > >> like to send him a hard drive with already installed, as he is not > > >> an OS/Hardware guy. > > >> > > >>Is it possible for me to install an IDE drive in my machine ( > > >> Pentium 486 D ) > > > > > > Didn't Intel call the "586" processor family "Pentium" because they > > > couldn't trademark numbers? > > > > That's my understanding. But AMD produced a processor called > > the 586, which is a 486 class processor. > > > As a long-time AMD user, I can only say that I do not remember such a > processor, and I don't think it existed. Their names were always very > different from Intel ones. > > > > (my point being how can a "Pentium" also be "486"?) > > > > AIUI, it cannot. > > Anne > -- > Registered Linux User No.293302 (http://counter.li.org/) >