I started by inserting the motherboard, hard drive, CD-ROM, floppy drive and the networking, video and sound cards. I plugged in the keyboard, monitor, mouse and the tower and started it up. It started up its text based interface detecting the system, all was going well until it came with a BIOS checksum error and an invalid floppy drive, so I took apart the computer and removed the motherboard, leads, memory and the cards.
I replaced the motherboard and inserted again, re-installing all of the above and then started again, loaded fine so I entered setup, I changed the first boot from floppy to CD-ROM, auto-detected the primary master and secondary master/slave and restarted the computer.
The computer started fine all loaded up, continuing to the next screen with just a flashing cursor, well that cursor stayed there for 5 minutes so I shutdown the computer and check it again for any loose cables, reposition the power sw, reset sw, power ldd and the speaker cables and restarted for the 3rd time, that's the problem with making your own computer, you get experience but at a frustrating cost.
Startup for the 3rd time, all is good, computer loads Linux Red Hat 8.0 disk and starts installing, I partition the hard drive, wiping Windows 98 and continue installation. Half an hour later tada!, Linux Red Hat is finally finished and ready to configure.
After 5 1/2 hours (including breaks) I've custom made my own server computer.
This post has been edited by Dart060: 30 November 2004 - 09:29 AM
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