Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 1st Mar 2009 17:26 UTC, submitted by kaiwai
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RE[2]: Sadly, similar experience
by lemur2 on Mon 2nd Mar 2009 06:29
in reply to "RE: Sadly, similar experience"
What is the point of this exercise (buying the Windows version of a netbook and trying to install a Linux distro on it)? Why not just buy the version of the Aspire with Linux pre-loaded? That's what I did. Wireless works fine. Wired networking works fine. All of the hardware I've tried out seems to work fine. And I'm reasonably sure that at any given hardware level the Linux version costs about $50 less than the Windows one. So again I ask: If you wanted an Acer with Linux on it, why didn't you buy one of the Acers with Linux preloaded on it?
I can't speak for the Acer specifically, but very often the OEM will offer a constrained version of Linux only on a lower-spec, cheaper, SSD-only version of the netbook, and Windows XP only on a higher-spec, more expensive, comes-with-a-hard-disk version of the same machine.
Many people want the higher-spec hardware (identical hardware to the Windows offering) with an unconstrained version of Linux pre-loaded (ie. one with a large associated on-line repository).
Typically, you can't buy such a thing. Funny about that.
RE[2]: Sadly, similar experience
by darknexus on Mon 2nd Mar 2009 06:56
in reply to "RE: Sadly, similar experience"
Because the preloaded Linpus Lite is not the version of Linux they want to use, and because in many areas you can't always get the Linux version with the specs you want anyway? It's sometimes difficult to find the hd version of the aa1 preloaded with Linux, for example, rather you might end up having to get one with an ssd. The aa1's ssd being as slow as molasses, that may not be what you'd want.




Member since:
2009-03-02
What is the point of this exercise (buying the Windows version of a netbook and trying to install a Linux distro on it)? Why not just buy the version of the Aspire with Linux pre-loaded? That's what I did.
Wireless works fine. Wired networking works fine. All of the hardware I've tried out seems to work fine. And I'm reasonably sure that at any given hardware level the Linux version costs about $50 less than the Windows one.
So again I ask: If you wanted an Acer with Linux on it, why didn't you buy one of the Acers with Linux preloaded on it?