In January I bumped my Dell 1501's memory to 2 GB, added a 320 GB hard drive, and installed Kubuntu 9.10 (i386 because I had it available). After getting flaky Broadcom wireless to work with b43-fwcutter, the machine was an absolute pleasure. Not a speed demon, of course, but the best working PC I've experienced.
I upgraded an old desktop from Karmic 9.10 to Lucid 10.04 on Saturday, just to see what nightmares might be in store for upgrading the Dell 1501. Not to be disappointed, the desktop upgrade hung during online upgrade. Alternate desktop i386 install also was a failure. Frustration had me looking for another KDE-based distribution, but I decided to try the i386 desktop install once again. Miracle of miracles, it worked - although there were some wacky wireless issues.
Now to live dangerously...
I responded to the upgrade dialog box on the Dell 1501, letting it do an online upgrade to Lucid. I sat and watched the entire install, not wanting to miss the exact moment when everything went to $%@*. But surprise, surprise - it worked wonderfully. At the end of the install, it removed old extraneous S/W.
After updating my souces, I upgraded to KDE SC 4.4.3, and that too was a success. Oh, the excitement was nearly overwhelming! So I decided to hibernate the machine and watch a movie with my wife (hibernate had always worked OK for the Dell 1501 on 9.10, whereas sleep wouldn't).
Now I have a Dell 1501 brick: it's totally borked! It will not recover gracefully from hibernate. The laptop screen is just horizontal lines, a few 1-pixel or so colored vertical lines, and generally one broad (150 pixels, or so) vertical band of white. There is no grub2 file to fall back on. Powering off and restarting seems to have it come up in awake-from-hibernation fashion instead of a cold reboot.
Both the i386 and amd-64 desktop CDs produce the same (or similarly useless) displays after fully loading. I can see the language prompt and ensuing boot menu just fine, but it's totally downhill from that point on. So I can do nothing with either of those two CDs. Interestingly enough, I have no problems with a Chakra CD or the latest from PCLinuxOS (although it gives me a 1024 x 768 display, raher than the normal 1280 x 800).
Does anyone have a suggestion for recovering my sad, sad Dell 1501? Otherwise, I think this may be the final straw. I love having a big, well-intentioned organization and community standing behind my distribution of choice, but there's a limit to my masochistic Kubuntu-upgrade-nightmare tendencies.
I upgraded an old desktop from Karmic 9.10 to Lucid 10.04 on Saturday, just to see what nightmares might be in store for upgrading the Dell 1501. Not to be disappointed, the desktop upgrade hung during online upgrade. Alternate desktop i386 install also was a failure. Frustration had me looking for another KDE-based distribution, but I decided to try the i386 desktop install once again. Miracle of miracles, it worked - although there were some wacky wireless issues.
Now to live dangerously...
I responded to the upgrade dialog box on the Dell 1501, letting it do an online upgrade to Lucid. I sat and watched the entire install, not wanting to miss the exact moment when everything went to $%@*. But surprise, surprise - it worked wonderfully. At the end of the install, it removed old extraneous S/W.
After updating my souces, I upgraded to KDE SC 4.4.3, and that too was a success. Oh, the excitement was nearly overwhelming! So I decided to hibernate the machine and watch a movie with my wife (hibernate had always worked OK for the Dell 1501 on 9.10, whereas sleep wouldn't).
Now I have a Dell 1501 brick: it's totally borked! It will not recover gracefully from hibernate. The laptop screen is just horizontal lines, a few 1-pixel or so colored vertical lines, and generally one broad (150 pixels, or so) vertical band of white. There is no grub2 file to fall back on. Powering off and restarting seems to have it come up in awake-from-hibernation fashion instead of a cold reboot.
Both the i386 and amd-64 desktop CDs produce the same (or similarly useless) displays after fully loading. I can see the language prompt and ensuing boot menu just fine, but it's totally downhill from that point on. So I can do nothing with either of those two CDs. Interestingly enough, I have no problems with a Chakra CD or the latest from PCLinuxOS (although it gives me a 1024 x 768 display, raher than the normal 1280 x 800).
Does anyone have a suggestion for recovering my sad, sad Dell 1501? Otherwise, I think this may be the final straw. I love having a big, well-intentioned organization and community standing behind my distribution of choice, but there's a limit to my masochistic Kubuntu-upgrade-nightmare tendencies.
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