Archive for August, 2008
Asus EEE 901: Debian it is
As my previous blog resulted in a large amount of reactions, I thought it would be best to tell the final outcome. I’ve settled on Debian with recognizing that installing on an Eee 901 is not an easy task, so I need to spend more time on it than I wanted, but Ok. So be it.
I’ve made notes on my personal wiki how I did it, and I thought it might be a good idea to share it, maybe it helps someone.
I still feel that when you call yourself an eee-distro it is your job to support the 901 too. Most comments on my blog tell that they have had success installing a distro on their distro, but they fail to tell me on which Eee. The 901 has a different network and wifi card and that means that with most distro’s you end up with no network or wifi at the end. Probably normal people can not solve.
So here come my notes, I’ll post a sequal for the remaining points later on. Read more by going to my site.
Asus EEE 901 re-installation
Yesterday I received my new EEE 901, to be prepared for akademy, I want to install another distro on it. That distro has to have KDE 4.1.0 of course, else it is useless anyway.
My first choice would have been openSUSE. They don’t have a special EEE distro, but they have excellent instructions. Installing is a bit weird though. You can use 1 usb stick and install openSUSE 10.3 on it, and after that you can upgrade to 11.0. I think this way you start with a mess, and I don’t want that. The other option is with two USB sticks, without proper documentation how to do it with a cd-rom drive. As my 2GB USB stick could not hold the 2GB image anyway, I decided to just use the regular installer CD and see what would happen. Well, no luck, as openSUSE did not like the external CD-player (can’t find CD configuration images or something like that). Ok, a bit stuck now.
Second choice was Debian. I know the Debian KDE4.1 packages are ok and there is a DebianEee project. Unfortunatly that seems to run behind as the 901 wifi is not supported, I need to download compile the kernel driver by hand and after that Network-Manager still refuses to play with it. Besides that the KDE packages experimental and unstable repository. Although I did learn about apt-pinning, it still feels a bit uncomfortable.
So my third option was Kubuntu. It also has a dedicated ‘distro’ for the Eee. I’ve downloaded the iso and tried it. There is also no wireless or ethernet when you have booted from the live-cd. The instructions from wiki.eeeuser.com let you compile drivers and install extra packages via a flash drive. I just don’t get this. Why have I just burned a cd and now I need additional packages to get it to work?
Mandriva is bragging about excellent Eee support. It is an option, but the KDE 4 packaging in the past was not so good, running behind and available in there unstable repository, which is not generally advisable for the rest of the computer.