I just wanted to drop a note about installing Kubuntu 9.04 on my new netbook last night.
After getting XP fully patched, and various programs installed, I turned my attention to setting up Linux.
I used Unetbootin to create a bootable thumbdrive installer from the kubuntu 9.04 .ISO image. It worked great! So, if anyone is looking for a way to install Linux on their netbook without the use of an external CD drive, Unetbootin works very well.
Using the disk partitioning tool included in the Kubuntu installer, I resized my XP partition down (from the full 160gigs) to 40 gigs. I then created a 40 gig partition for Kubuntu and a 1 gig swap partition. I left the remaining space unpartitioned for now. I plan to install Windows 7 RC, and leave a partition for random data storage.
Kubuntu seems to have picked up all of the hardware right out of the box, although, I haven't tried the webcam, or really done a lot of thorough testing. Sound, WiFi, Ethernet, Video, and USB ports all work great.
A few things I want to note:
Many of the dialog boxes are just tall enough that the buttons on the bottom get covered up by the taskbar on the 1024x600 display. I imagine setting the taskbar to auto-hide would fix this.
I went into the settings and reduced all of the system fonts by two points to make screen font sizes more appropriate (I felt they were too large in comparison to the other buttons/window decorations).
Also, I turned off the desktop effects to gain some extra battery life. The system didn't run badly with them turned on, but it does of course feel slightly more responsive with the effects turned off.
A little while ago, I wrote up a post on my blog about the things I install on a fresh Kubuntu system to get it ready for "day to day" use, if anyone is interested.
http://matt.gehrisch.us/2009/04/26/k...-installation/
-SF
After getting XP fully patched, and various programs installed, I turned my attention to setting up Linux.
I used Unetbootin to create a bootable thumbdrive installer from the kubuntu 9.04 .ISO image. It worked great! So, if anyone is looking for a way to install Linux on their netbook without the use of an external CD drive, Unetbootin works very well.
Using the disk partitioning tool included in the Kubuntu installer, I resized my XP partition down (from the full 160gigs) to 40 gigs. I then created a 40 gig partition for Kubuntu and a 1 gig swap partition. I left the remaining space unpartitioned for now. I plan to install Windows 7 RC, and leave a partition for random data storage.
Kubuntu seems to have picked up all of the hardware right out of the box, although, I haven't tried the webcam, or really done a lot of thorough testing. Sound, WiFi, Ethernet, Video, and USB ports all work great.
A few things I want to note:
Many of the dialog boxes are just tall enough that the buttons on the bottom get covered up by the taskbar on the 1024x600 display. I imagine setting the taskbar to auto-hide would fix this.
I went into the settings and reduced all of the system fonts by two points to make screen font sizes more appropriate (I felt they were too large in comparison to the other buttons/window decorations).
Also, I turned off the desktop effects to gain some extra battery life. The system didn't run badly with them turned on, but it does of course feel slightly more responsive with the effects turned off.
A little while ago, I wrote up a post on my blog about the things I install on a fresh Kubuntu system to get it ready for "day to day" use, if anyone is interested.
http://matt.gehrisch.us/2009/04/26/k...-installation/
-SF
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