Translating Libre.fm

April 18th, 2009

I am trying to help translate Libre.fm to Malay. Help is very much needed.

Acer Aspire One D150 running Linux - part 2

March 27th, 2009

If you’ve read my earlier post about this, you’d know that I’ve done nothing but install MEPIS and it managed somehow to get the built-in speakers on my Aspire One D150 to work. There was a suggestion that it needed the alsa version 1.0.16 (which MEPIS uses) but Cannonfodder has already tried that on Mint, to no avail.

Personally, I prefer GNOME over KDE and MEPIS comes with KDE as a default. I’ve been trying to get used to using the default KDE apps (I know you don’t have to, but it just feels wrong), but aside from Amarok, everything else just feels broken to me. I know partly it’s because it has only been a week or so and it’s KDE 3.5 and the tiny screen doesn’t help, but I have a ton of gtk apps like geany and xchat loaded. I guess what you’re used to is what you’re used to sometimes.

What all of this is leading up to is that I am going to install another Linux distro on this netbook. I downloaded a Jaunty daily from March 24th (I think the Jaunty Beta is out by now so you might want to try that), and proceeded to install it on Aspire One. The first thing I noticed was that the speakers work in the live session when I booted the USB drive, so that was promising. Installation went smoothly much like my earlier Jaunty install. This time too, I decided to reformat everything with ext4. In less than an hour from booting up the live USB, I’m presented with the login screen.

I logged in, and the speakers work. Wifi seemed to work. Ubuntu presented me with an option to activate madwifi drivers instead of using the default ath5k drivers. I decided to stick with ath5k simply because it’s working. I put in the passkey and it connected to my access point, no problem. I added Medibuntu repository and installed Skype (which took some time because of #streamyxslow). I discovered that the built-in mic still doesn’t work, but built-in speakers, and audio jacks work just fine. Another issue I noticed as I was using it is that the scrollbar control area thingy on the trackpad seems to be really really thin, and at times it just refuses to work. Looking around online I found a thread on ubuntuforums.org about issues with the 10″ Aspire One. Still not much in the way of resolving the issues at the moment though.

screenshot-ubuntu-firefox

So I started to make it look the way I want it to look and just use it. The built-in mic not working doesn’t quite bother me as much as the built-in speakers not working (as in other distros I’ve tried). I guess that is just down to expectations: I expect a computer to have a working speaker. I do not expect it to have a working mic. It’ll probably sound crappy anyways.

So in summary:
Wifi ✔
Built-in speakers ✔
Built-in mic ✗
Headphone jack ✔
Mic jack ✔
Webcam ✔
Bluetooth ? Update 9 April 2009: file transfers seem to be working. I don’t have a bluetooth headset.
Card reader ?
Trackpad ✔ is problematic. Update 9 April 2009: the latest updates seem to have fixed the trackpad issue

Acer Aspire One D150 running Linux

March 23rd, 2009

I got an Acer Aspire One D150 as a mobile replacement for the Dell Inspiron 6400 that had been my constant companion for more than two years. It’s LCD screen died as far as I can tell and sending it in to the shop is not an option at the moment. It still works; I have it hooked up to an external monitor and it runs just fine. But we’re not going to talk about that.

The D150 is priced at RM1499 and sports a 10 inch screen, bluetooth, webcam, plus the usual features you would expect from a netbook. The default amount of RAM is 1GB, but after some deliberation I decided to get the shop to upgrade it to 2GB for an extra RM74. It also comes with Windows XP. Yes, I have committed the crime of adding Windows netbooks sales figures :(.

i can haz linux netbook

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