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authorJason McIntyre <jmc@cvs.openbsd.org>2004-03-17 09:25:11 +0000
committerJason McIntyre <jmc@cvs.openbsd.org>2004-03-17 09:25:11 +0000
commit992866d50243e49ac5d348aefb9e13c04303aee0 (patch)
tree7735cd7f8507b6d965eb5f71961b757cf18ece13 /distrib/notes/mac68k/prep
parent7846de0caa516d0a12a6dcd92f07eb2a31f023e1 (diff)
grammar, consistency fixes, and typos;
ok miod@
Diffstat (limited to 'distrib/notes/mac68k/prep')
-rw-r--r--distrib/notes/mac68k/prep10
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/distrib/notes/mac68k/prep b/distrib/notes/mac68k/prep
index a66298ab69f..c907556f390 100644
--- a/distrib/notes/mac68k/prep
+++ b/distrib/notes/mac68k/prep
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-dnl $OpenBSD: prep,v 1.12 2004/03/15 08:37:25 xsa Exp $
+dnl $OpenBSD: prep,v 1.13 2004/03/17 09:25:09 jmc Exp $
Find your favorite disk partitioning utility. Some
of the ones that have been tried and seem to work are:
APS Powertools 2.7.3
@@ -44,13 +44,13 @@ partitioning it with Mac OS partitions of the correct size. If you do this,
simply select the "Convert" button when choosing partitions to build a
filesystem on in Mkfs (see below).
-Before moving on, you should assure that your machine is running the correct
+Before moving on, you should make sure that your machine is running the correct
software on the Mac OS side. In the Memory control panel, you should turn
Virtual Memory off whenever you are planning to use the BSD/Mac68k Booter.
-You should also assure that your machine is using 32-bit addressing. If
+You should also make sure that your machine is using 32-bit addressing. If
there is no "Addressing:" option in your Memory control panel and your
-machine is supported, your probably will need Mode32. Mode32 is a control
-panel and extension combination which enable 32-bit addressing on older Macs
+machine is supported, you will probably need Mode32. Mode32 is a control
+panel and extension combination which enables 32-bit addressing on older Macs
which do not use it by default. This program is available from any Info-Mac
mirror. Finally, we recommend strongly that, at least for the purposes of
setting the system up, you run with the machine's monitor in 1-bit ("Black