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Date:      Sat, 26 Feb 2000 13:55:02 -0800
From:      "Dan O'Connor" <dan@jgl.reno.nv.us>
To:        "Doug Barton" <Doug@simplenet.com>
Cc:        "freebsd-questions" <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: My machine prints "calcru: negative time..."
Message-ID:  <114601bf80a5$6a87b120$0200000a@danco.home>

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>> I have an old Dell Pentium 90 that randomly boots up at a reported
processor
>> speed of 55, 76, 83, 87 and 89 MHz. I have to keep rebooting over and
over
>> until it finally settles in at 90.21 MHz. If I leave it at anything below
85
>> MHz, I get "calcru" errors non-stop...
>
> That's funny, I have a 6 year old dell dimensions xps90 and I have the
>same problem. I've found that if I power off the system for 10 or 20
>seconds then power it back on it almost always comes back with the
>correct clock speed. I too think it's a quirk of this old classic, I've
>never seen any other dells with this quirk.

Mine is an old Dimension XPS 90 MoBo in an even-older Austin 486 desktop
box, all cobbled together from the discards of other upgrades gone by...

I haven't really found a reboot pattern that gets me up to speed any faster.
I've tried random mixtures of power-down-and-wait-a-few-seconds cycles,
reset switch cycles, and 'shutdown -r now' cycles. It just seems to come up
at 90MHz when it's good and ready.

Well, every computer has its quirks. At least we know what ours are :-)

--Dan

**  The thing I like most about Windows 98 is...
**  You can download FreeBSD with it!




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