In article <(E-Mail Removed)>,
(E-Mail Removed) says...
> I got hold of a real antic - toshiba satellite 2515cds with PMMX-266.
> If anyone remembers how to deal with this dinosaur, please answer a
> few questions:
> 1. Is it regular Socket 7 or something different?
If it's a P5 w/"MMX technology" it's Socket-7, but it *might* be
soldered down. I'm not familiar with Toshibas.
> 2. Are there any multiplier and (hardly possible but still hope) FSB
> clock jumpers? What are possible FSB settings?
Likely not on a laptop, but maybe.
> 3. Did anyone try AMD k6-2+ or 3+ in this? Did it work?
I wouldn't give it much chance. Laptops tend to be very specific.
It likely wouldn't have BIOS support for processors other than what
it came with.
> My plan is to use one of these (whatever I can have on ebay or
> anywhere else - they must be around $20) to make this thing at least
> marginally capable to run win2k. Even if the bus is locked at 66, it
> still would make the CPU run at 400. If, against the odds, the bus
> can be set to 75, that would mean 450. On-chip L2 will also speed
> things up. And if the chipset happens to be Super7 (snowball in hell
> chance) this baby might go up to 600. Right now it has only a corrupt
> win98 that boots only to safe mode, and no NIC, so I can't even load
> something like Sandra to get more info about the system. I want to
> install win2k and office and give it to old folks - for browsing,
> email, and light MS Word typing this thing should be marginally
> adequate. I just don't want them to deal with crappy 9x, and 2k needs
> a bit more horsepower than 266.
You might want to do a web search. A quick search on "toshiba
satellite 2515cds" gets 550 hits, including many for Linux on that
model.
--
Keith