Linked by Gary Rennie on Thu 8th Jan 2009 21:06 UTC
Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu To supplement storage space with the initial purchase of the Aspire One (8 GB SSD version), I bought a 16 GB Transcend TS16GBSDHC6 card that integrates nicely into the left card slot. The pre-installed Linux Linpus just wasn't what I needed since I use many networking tools at work and at home. I initially ran Ubuntu 8.041 with the /home partition on the 16 GB SDHC card. I discovered Eeebuntu while searching for information on how to boot and run Linux off a SDHC card. The goal was of multi-boot installations of Ubuntu, with one install specifically loaded with the tools I use at work. The Acer Aspire One BIOS does not 'see' the card, so you can't boot from it using the [F12] startup key (More on the SDHC boot up further in this article).
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RE: And in other news....
by DittoBox on Fri 9th Jan 2009 19:41 UTC in reply to "And in other news...."
DittoBox
Member since:
2005-07-08

I bought a Dell Mini 9 in October with Ubuntu preloaded. Recently I downloaded the standard x86 8.10 ISO, used the USB Ubuntu installer (easy installation via synaptic) and installed ubuntu from a USB stick I had laying around (didn't even have to remove anything from the stick) All but the speakers worked entirely out of the box. I only had to add a single line to the bottom of a config file to get the speakers working (other audio was fine).

Windows on laptops typically requires tracking down and installing drivers, waiting an hour or more for windows update to install the latest SP and other updates. With this laptop it would have required an optical drive for initial installation.

Even the compositor worked straight away, and quite well!

Had it not been for the speakers not working and the need to disable swap, this would have been smoother and easier than even doing an OS X install. What's more is that OS X devs have specific hardware they're tailoring too, Ubuntu devs don't.

Well done I say.

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