James Ogley

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On way to Lone Barn for pub quiz and well-earned #ale. #beer


http://twitpic.com/9fc68 - Evening Celebration. http://bursledonparish.org
Which is going to happen first? The final concluding or Mrs Federer going into Labour? #wimbledon
At St P's. Time to get set up for all-age.
Heading to church now to make sure the building is unlocked and open.
All views expressed on this site are my own. They do not necessarily reflect those of the Parish of Bursledon, the Diocese of Winchester or the Church of England. As such, I do not expect them all to be popular but you, the reader, can certainly expect them to be honest.
Kudos to Realtek - Thursday, 31st August 2006, 13:47:05 BST.

This morning, I emailed Realtek's NIC support line to ask about the Linux driver they offer for download for the 8168 NIC in my laptop. It's a source-code download (nice one) but it has never compiled on SUSE (not so nice one).

Having sent the email, I went out, had some lunch and did some shopping. I returned to a reply from one of Realtek's Tech Support guys. It wasn't the standard "thank you for your email, we're looking into it" email either, it had a tarball of the latest beta version of the driver attached. This update had clearly (based on the changelog) been produced as a result of my email. Best of all, it worked. I built the module and installed it. Then I fired up YaST and was able to configure it.

Now, to try and determine the license, line 98 of r1000_n.c reads

MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
However, no copy of the GPL is included. If it turns out that it is GPL (or at least OSI approved), I'd love to see this included in openSUSE for 10.2.