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Date:      Tue, 25 Aug 1998 13:50:45 -0500 (CDT)
From:      Joel Ray Holveck <joelh@gnu.org>
To:        mike@smith.net.au
Cc:        hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: PCI devices
Message-ID:  <199808251850.NAA00781@detlev.UUCP>
In-Reply-To: <199808231518.PAA24438@dingo.cdrom.com> (message from Mike Smith on Sun, 23 Aug 1998 15:18:14 %2B0000)
References:   <199808231518.PAA24438@dingo.cdrom.com>

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> For clarity's sake and no more, let me point out that "Plug and Play" 
> is a generic term describing zero-user-intervention configuration.  PCI 
> is implicitly "plug and play" - you can't have a non-PnP PCI card, so
> it's more correct to say that PCI devices only support Plug-n-Play so 
> you can't turn it off.
> This confusion is common; many people refer to PnP only in the context 
> of ISA PnP, but PnP is a generic term applied to ISA PnP, PCI, PCMCIA, 
> CardBUS, USB, etc.

S100 PnP...

Best,
joelh

-- 
Joel Ray Holveck - joelh@gnu.org - http://www.wp.com/piquan
   Fourth law of programming:
   Anything that can go wrong wi
sendmail: segmentation violation - core dumped

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