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I have just received my black Eee PC 4G Galaxy and I am very very impressed. I bought it to be able to view some work related reference materials and stay in touch with my employer for work assignments. It seems like it will do a lot more.
It feels very sturdy. Heavier than I thought it would feel. The screen is small but I knew what it would be like from looking at some DVD players before I purchased it. It booted quickly! I didnt time it but it seemed very fast.
Like a lot of folks here I was planning on replacing the default O/S with somehing differnent. I did my research on what was available and even played with some of the live distro's on my winPC before I picked one to try on my Eee. EeeXubuntu (r3) had about everything I would need, and the feel of an MS operating system that I was used to. I have found that a lot of the things work the same but have different names.
A disclaimer before I continue, I have never used Linux before in m life. I have some friends that use it and have always wanted to give it a try but never got around to it. I have used many versions of MS Windows for about 10 years now and consider myslf a novice user at best.
After playing with, and trashing, the xandros distro that came installed in both beginner and advanced modes I was ready to put EeeXubutu on. (This is a learning proccess for me)
I installed EeeXubuntu onto a 2GB thumbdrive just like the wiki instructed and it worked flawlessly. I booted it up on my Eee and played with it for about and hour and figured I was ready to wipe out my hard drive and install it.
The install was very straight forward at first. Pick a primary language and timezone then the partition/format section came up. I was lost for a while because I couldnt remember reading much about how to partition/format using the installation program. All I had to do was about 10 minutes of reading to figure it out. Long story short, you have to select manual and go though each aspect of the drives you have. There is plenty of help scattered throughout the forum on this. A suggestion for the guys that maintain the wiki is maybe you could put a more indepth guide for beginners to this proccess in the EeeXubuntu installation guide. Anyway, after I figured out how to setup for format I moved on to the next section.
(A tip for new people that havent used Linux before, choose a password with more than 6 characters. I found this out the hard way. It seems that if your password is too short it dosent allow you full access to edit things in root. This might be common knowledge to people familiar with linux but it took me a while to figure it out. One I did then everything else went smooth)
After I entered my personal info and password I was ready to install. The next part was fully automatic. It took about 20 minutes total time and was trouble free.
I booted up for the first time and it worked great. Imediately the update manager told me there were some 111 updates available. I had to manually connect to my wireless conection first but that was easy. (just click on the icon in the lower right corner and select your connection). I started the updater and it began downloading everyting to update my O/S. After about 15 minutes it asked for a reboot.
I felt like I was at a milestone. I was ready to try out EeeXubuntu for the first time in all its glory. It booted quickly and before I knew it I was at the screen to enter my login info. I did and it finnished the boot. My wireless connection was automatic this time. No problems there. If you make it to this point you are ready to go on with the list of know issues and fixes in the wiki. This is where I found out about the password problem. it wouldnt let me edit in root on mousepad. after I enetered the commands and my short password in terminal the mousepad would open with a blank page and the warning at the top about changes made inroot could be dangerous. It was s simple fix, I went into the system>users & groups> and eidited my account info to change my password, reboot and waaaalllaa. that fixed it.
It took me a while to figure things out but once I did, following the instructions to te letter in the wiki worked great.
(a warning to new people like me, you MUST use the exact keys/fonts as they are listed in the wiki. You cannot substitue upper and lower case letters)
I recommend going trough the list that the wiki gives you in the order listed. If you mess something up then its easier to go back and fix it.
I could write 10 more pages about the trails and tribulations of fixing the know issues of this install but I think everyone will have a different experience with this. In my particular case I was learning from the beginning and as I went along. Suffice to say that I have completed almost the entire list and EeeXubuntu is up and running strong. I can tell you that my confidence level has gone up ten fold in just a couple of days using linux. The installation seems scary at first but even if your a novice, newby, noob like me you can do it too.
I think you will like EeeXubuntu r3, I know I do so far!
I have also installed:
Open Office 2.3 & Konqueror (they work great)
Post Script:
I am writing this on my Eee using Open office Writer and testing the battery at the same time. So far the battery has lasted 3 hours and 15 minutes with full screen brightness and wifi on. The meter that was automatically installed for me seems to work well, it shows 13% remaining.
Last edited by Wyowind (2008-03-08 1:40:04 pm)
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I do have a question about EeeXubuntu by the way. When I open the System Monitor program it shows all my Ram (2GB) and that my proccessor is running at 900 mhz.
Was there a fix for the proccessor clocking included in one of the updates or is it just reading what the proccessor is capable of?
Thanks
Last edited by Wyowind (2008-03-08 1:38:08 pm)
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This is a great write up. I appreciate you sharing your experience with use. It certainly makes me more willing to "take that giant leap" in installing a different operating system. Good work!
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Welcome, and thanks for sharing your experiences!
Wyowind wrote:
Was there a fix for the proccessor clocking included in one of the updates or is it just reading what the proccessor is capable of?
I believe it's reading the processor (or more particularly, the FSB) incorrectly. I don't think the FSB control module is installed by default, and definitely not overclocked by default, though, in eeeXubuntu. You can check to see if you have a folder /proc/eee -- if you do, the overclocking module is running. In that case, the text file /proc/eee/fsb will tell you what the FSB is. It should be of the form
xxx 24 1
Where xxx is the FSB. The CPU speed in MHz is 9x the FSB, so by default, it's 70Mhz, but it can go up to 100MHz, for 900MHz overall speed (and slightly beyond).
BTW, the people who maintain the Wiki is *you*.
You have the perspective of a new user who doesn't know too much Linux. Many of the rest of us do not anymore. So if you can make the Wiki more comprehensible to new users, please do it!
ModNote™: Moved posts following this one were placed in this thread.
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when you jump into overclocking, it seems to be a little more complex than what you've been doing. least to me it did. my brain isn't much of a sponge anymore so its taken me YEARS to move a little past being a novice with linux. i learned MSDOS when i was a little kid.
the wikis here are lifesavers and you will come to depend on them to get things running smooth enough. and btw, i hope i'm not the only one who likes using the nano editor over the other editors. lol i just find it easier to worth within one window than open another one.
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I am in the same situation as you Wyowind, just got my eee less then a week ago.
Just wanted to add (and I do plan on updating some wiki stuff to make it a bit more n00b friendly) that when a howto say "you will need to know how to edit information using vi text editor... it means it ![]()
I had was trying to update xandros with the new kernel that would allow it to recognize the 2 GB RAM I installed... well... lets just say I've learned a valuable lesson in following directions.
Thanks to everyone on the forums and wiki for there helpful walk-through's and how-to's.
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"trying to update xandros with the new kernel that would allow it to recognize the 2 GB RAM I installed... well... lets just say I've learned a valuable lesson in following directions."
I did the same thing.....LOL. I never planned on using the default install too long though. I really like EeeXubuntu.
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yep ditto, i basically got the eee so i could mess around with linux, and learn more about computers in general without fear of bricking my desktop pc.
When i couldn't even run the rescue boot >.< I just said oh well time to install eeeXubuntu
.
I love this little guy so far.
next goal: Gaming, I've heard that my mmo of choice, City of Heroes can actually be played on this guy.
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Glad to see a new user enjoying the wonders of Linux. ![]()
However, I have never had problems with 1-5 letter passwords. On my EEE, I have no personal information or the likes, so I usually choose a password around that length, and never had problems with it. Of course with my main system, I have a much longer password.
Are you sure you didn't make a typo in the password-creating process? I know that at least I can make the same two typos in a row without noticing.
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Not sure what happened. All I know is that when I changed it to a longer password the problem was solved and that was good enough for me..hehehe
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Any way to install EEEXubuntu without losing (and having to reinstall) all the applications that come installed in the original Xandros install?
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mellz wrote:
Any way to install EEEXubuntu without losing (and having to reinstall) all the applications that come installed in the original Xandros install?
Do you mean keep Xandros and have EeeXubuntu aswell??
Depends on how much space you have but you could partition the drive so you had both on there, or like i did, get a large capacity SDHC card and install EeeXubuntu on that.
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Wyowind, thank you so much. I have been running Xandros advanced mode ever since I got my Eee...several months ago. I have never been near as happy with Xandros as I have Ubuntu on my main machine. I am very new to Linux too and REALLY appreciate this write up you have done. You have given me the courage to go ahead and try this, I think i will be really happy when done.
I would like to ask one question (and sorry, I may find the answer in this bulletin board here)...but where exactly is the instructions for installing the Eeeubuntu to the 2 gig hard drive. So far, I have not found that wiki. Again, sorry if that's a stupid question but the one Wiki I was directed to was very barren of instructions for the newbie.
Thanks much again!
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