Please help me with this error, I don't know what to do about it.
I have searched the Kubuntu forums and found no promising information for this.
Downloaded kubuntu-7.04-desktop-i386.iso yesterday. I intend to install Feisty Fawn on Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 (6.0.142.0). I've been running Edgy on Virtual PC 2007 for about a month, with no show-stopping problems.
After creating the virtual machine, capturing the iso, and starting the virtual machine, I get the visually pleasing boot menu. I choose "Start or install Kubuntu", and get the "Loading Linux Kernel" message. Then the screen goes black for a moment, and two error lines appear:
[ 20.800615] isapnp: checksum for device 1 is not valid (0x89)
[ 20.808457] isapnp: checksum for device 2 is not valid (0xbe)
Loading, please wait...
Then Kubuntu proceeds to boot as normal to the desktop. The two numeric codes in square brackets seem to change every time I reboot.
The desktop graphics are trashed because, of course, Microsoft Virtual PC doesn't properly support the 24-bit color mode that so many Linux distros use by default. I'll work on getting around this problem later, since it's become familiar to me from previous installs.
TIA
I have searched the Kubuntu forums and found no promising information for this.
Downloaded kubuntu-7.04-desktop-i386.iso yesterday. I intend to install Feisty Fawn on Microsoft Virtual PC 2007 (6.0.142.0). I've been running Edgy on Virtual PC 2007 for about a month, with no show-stopping problems.
After creating the virtual machine, capturing the iso, and starting the virtual machine, I get the visually pleasing boot menu. I choose "Start or install Kubuntu", and get the "Loading Linux Kernel" message. Then the screen goes black for a moment, and two error lines appear:
[ 20.800615] isapnp: checksum for device 1 is not valid (0x89)
[ 20.808457] isapnp: checksum for device 2 is not valid (0xbe)
Loading, please wait...
Then Kubuntu proceeds to boot as normal to the desktop. The two numeric codes in square brackets seem to change every time I reboot.
The desktop graphics are trashed because, of course, Microsoft Virtual PC doesn't properly support the 24-bit color mode that so many Linux distros use by default. I'll work on getting around this problem later, since it's become familiar to me from previous installs.
TIA
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