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Member since:
2006-12-18
Linux is easy when you don't leave the ordinairy path. When you decide not to heed that advice, you probably are going to find yourself deep in the woods.
Unfortunately, my needs require that I use a Tablet PC. I've been working with Linux off and on for well over 11 years. I always end up going back to Windows for one reason or another.
This weekend, I decided to try Linux again. I wiped my Tablet PC of Windows 7 RC, and installed Fedora 11. I went through the now familiar routine of setting up the machine to recognize my Wacom digitizer, etc. Then I found that the digitizer calibration is not remembered after suspending and resuming (I knew about this bug -- I submitted a bug report to Ubuntu when I first discovered it. I was hoping it was fixed). It worked in a previous version of the wacom-tools, so I install Fedora 10 and built a custom RPM of the version that works. I also install custom RPMs for GDM (from Fedora 8), so I can log in with the stylus. So far so good.
Then I get to audio recording. Right now I lecture using MS OneNote, and I record my notes and the audio. I thought I could do the same with Linux, using Xournal and a generic audio recording program. No go. For some reason, my audio chipset will not record audio. Sound works fine, but nothing I've messed with allows me to get audio recording from the built-in mic to work.
Long story short, I went through Ubuntu 9.04, Fedora 10 and Fedora 11 this weekend. None of them worked for my needs. Probably because my hardware is not 100% supported.
So, so unfortunate. I love messing with Linux. It works great for the desktop, but not for the Tablet PC... And here I am again with Windows 7 RC.