diff --git a/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml b/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml index 0d989fc544..d3f05af594 100644 --- a/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml +++ b/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ - +
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ LILO, or LInux LOader - This is a limited boot manager. Will boot FreeBSD, + This is a limited boot manager. It will boot FreeBSD, though some customization work is required in the LILO configuration file. @@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ About FAT32 FAT32 is the replacement to the FAT filesystem included in - Microsoft's OEM SR2 Beta release, which is expected to + Microsoft's OEM SR2 Beta release, which is expected to be utilitized on computers pre-loaded with Windows 95 towards the end of 1996. It converts the normal FAT file system and allows you to use smaller cluster sizes for larger hard @@ -397,7 +397,7 @@ Press Esc to continue sectors per track, with the number of cylinders and heads varying widely from disk to disk. Thus you can figure the number of bytes of data that'll fit on your own disk by - calculating: + calculating: (# of cylinders) × (# heads) × (63 @@ -410,7 +410,7 @@ Press Esc to continue (3148 cyl) × (16 heads) × (63 sectors/track) × (512 bytes/sect) - + which is 1,624,670,208 bytes, or around 1.6 Gig. diff --git a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml index 0d989fc544..d3f05af594 100644 --- a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml +++ b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/articles/multi-os/article.sgml @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ - +
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ LILO, or LInux LOader - This is a limited boot manager. Will boot FreeBSD, + This is a limited boot manager. It will boot FreeBSD, though some customization work is required in the LILO configuration file. @@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ About FAT32 FAT32 is the replacement to the FAT filesystem included in - Microsoft's OEM SR2 Beta release, which is expected to + Microsoft's OEM SR2 Beta release, which is expected to be utilitized on computers pre-loaded with Windows 95 towards the end of 1996. It converts the normal FAT file system and allows you to use smaller cluster sizes for larger hard @@ -397,7 +397,7 @@ Press Esc to continue sectors per track, with the number of cylinders and heads varying widely from disk to disk. Thus you can figure the number of bytes of data that'll fit on your own disk by - calculating: + calculating: (# of cylinders) × (# heads) × (63 @@ -410,7 +410,7 @@ Press Esc to continue (3148 cyl) × (16 heads) × (63 sectors/track) × (512 bytes/sect) - + which is 1,624,670,208 bytes, or around 1.6 Gig.