Ok, I have a bit of spare time in between DMSTech and LibDevConX^2 so I decided to upgrade my NB100 to OpenSuSE 11.4 using the downloaded iso image on my Zalman ZM-VE200. Having copied the important data onto the Zalman, I select the OpenSuSE image and reboot.
The laptop boots from the image perfectly, possibly slight faster than from actual DVD drive and I select the Update option when it is presented. The I go with defaults except that I don't let it delete all my added package repositories like Packman and VideoLAN since it's easier to go in afterwards and simply change 11.2 in the path to 11.4 instead of adding them anew. There is one dependency issue which I resolve by not installing the offending item and then it's time to go and get a coffee while installation proceeds.
And that's pretty much it - the install went through without a hitch and it seems pretty much all my settings etc. have transferred correctly.
Showing posts with label Toshiba NB100. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toshiba NB100. Show all posts
Wednesday, 27 July 2011
Friday, 21 May 2010
Lifebook U810 and OpenSuse 11.2
OK, heartened by my OpenSuse 11.2 experience on the NB100 - where pretty much everything worked out of the box (webcam, hibernation, most of special keys), I thought it was time to try it on the U810.
The install went OK, didn't need the acpi/pnp boot hacks to get wired ethernet working, the ath5K drivers worked reasonably well (if still a bit slow). Startup and shutdown were snappier than before and the KDE 4.3 3D desktop effects work fast enough (and are better integrated than compiz+KDE 3).
However, there are a couple of show stoppers:
The install went OK, didn't need the acpi/pnp boot hacks to get wired ethernet working, the ath5K drivers worked reasonably well (if still a bit slow). Startup and shutdown were snappier than before and the KDE 4.3 3D desktop effects work fast enough (and are better integrated than compiz+KDE 3).
However, there are a couple of show stoppers:
- Suspend and hibernate crash hard (power cycle hard) when there are SD/CF cards inserted. This appears (after a bit of digging) to be the eject action during shutdown. The only fix is to not do this which makes me uneasy about filesystem integrity and breaks automatic remounting on awakening.
- Webcam driver has been dropped as a separate driver pending inclusion in the uvcvideo core drivers - unfortunately this doesn't work yet.
Saturday, 1 May 2010
Toshiba NB100
I've just acquired a Toshiba NB100 - it was cheap. OpenSuse 11.2 went on quite easily and seems to work quite well though I have not tested it thoroughly yet. I took the plunge with KDE 4.4 and it seems to be quite nice now - the whole things starts up quickly and 3D effects work well (better integrated than KDE 3.5 + Compiz) though wobbly windows aren't quite as nifty as compiz. I find the desktop plane/expo features invaluable working on a small screen.
Good Points:
Upgradable to 2GB RAM
Network and VGA ports on the back of the unit
Opens flat
Dismantled it to put in a bigger HDD - it seems well built
- Big plate dissipates heat across the back of the keyboard keeping it cool and thus quiet
Three full size USB ports
Not so good points:
Case has to be opened to get at anything other than the RAM - and it's a fairly major operation
...in particular, swapping hard drives is a big dismantling job
No obvious spare ports/pads inside for easy modding
Battery sticks out at the back - but that does stop it tipping when the screen's right back
Good Points:
Upgradable to 2GB RAM
Network and VGA ports on the back of the unit
Opens flat
Dismantled it to put in a bigger HDD - it seems well built
- Big plate dissipates heat across the back of the keyboard keeping it cool and thus quiet
Three full size USB ports
Not so good points:
Case has to be opened to get at anything other than the RAM - and it's a fairly major operation
...in particular, swapping hard drives is a big dismantling job
No obvious spare ports/pads inside for easy modding
Battery sticks out at the back - but that does stop it tipping when the screen's right back
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