>Naturally, the lack of a FPU prevented some of the DamnSmallLinux >applications from working, but you can probably find a 486SX FPU chip for >the cost of postage, or just use a 486DX. Not necessarily true. I looked long and hard for a 387 chip a couple of yrs ago for a mobo that needed one and couldn't find the right one. There were at least 2 types. One had pins that go in a socket straight and one, like I needed, had j-pins and it slipped inside a square socket w/ the pins all around. I gave up looking, but I did find a 287 in a computer store, still new in the box. They wanted at least $30 for it, and it might have been $40. The PC isn't really worth that anymore. I still have a 286 that needs a 287, but also has a borked pwr supply. On ebay you don't always get what you think you are paying for. I hate buying stuff without pictures. I bought a 233 thinking it would be a socket 7, p-I. It turned out to be a slot 1, P-II. Couldn't even shoe-horn that in. Now if someone has a P-I 233, I could still find a use for it, but I'm probably ready to give away the 386. Brian Kelsay