Hi there,
I'm new to this forum and a (K)ubuntu user from Germany (please excuse English language errors, I think you should get what I want to aks anyway..).
I've been using gentoo for some time and changed to kubuntu because I was sick of compiling and I prefer KDE to gnome. It runs fine on my desktop and I now wanted to install it on my new notebook. It's a Sony Vaio VPCSB3X9E, one of the S-Series notebooks configured for the German market with i5 and 8GB RAM (details about the hardware are at sony.de, I can copy them in case of need), which is why I wanted to install the 64bit version as on my desktop.
I experienced the following issues and would be grateful for any comments pointing in the most suitable way for a proper running system:
I fist installed 11.10 and realized already during the installation that it gets hot and the fans run wild. The splash shell during booting and when entering it with Ctrl+Alt) looked very weird. It works but is mostly not usable as the letters can't be identified.
The noise from the fan was unbearable and several issues during daily use. I was unable to shut it down without a crash from a KDE-related installation.
That is why I installed 10:04 LTS. Installation went good and it was quiet like a stone. However, WLAN was not recognized and output on an external monitor did not work either (which did both work with 11.10). I need both. Beside that all seemed stable and good.
I searched a bit and found tools to control the fans etc. which is why I wanted to give 11.10 a second change (and I'm a bit into the "new stuff". This time the installation failed completely. The notebook got too hot during installation (seems as complex as DFT calculations of 100 atoms..
) and the internal control shut it down before it was finished.
Now my question is: What should I do? Try to get the missing components in 10.04 working, try to get the temperature etc. issues in 11.10 solved, install a 32bit verion,..?
I don't need a detailed instruction, just jour basic approach and a few catchwords to search for..
Thanks in advance,
Holger
I'm new to this forum and a (K)ubuntu user from Germany (please excuse English language errors, I think you should get what I want to aks anyway..).
I've been using gentoo for some time and changed to kubuntu because I was sick of compiling and I prefer KDE to gnome. It runs fine on my desktop and I now wanted to install it on my new notebook. It's a Sony Vaio VPCSB3X9E, one of the S-Series notebooks configured for the German market with i5 and 8GB RAM (details about the hardware are at sony.de, I can copy them in case of need), which is why I wanted to install the 64bit version as on my desktop.
I experienced the following issues and would be grateful for any comments pointing in the most suitable way for a proper running system:
I fist installed 11.10 and realized already during the installation that it gets hot and the fans run wild. The splash shell during booting and when entering it with Ctrl+Alt) looked very weird. It works but is mostly not usable as the letters can't be identified.
The noise from the fan was unbearable and several issues during daily use. I was unable to shut it down without a crash from a KDE-related installation.
That is why I installed 10:04 LTS. Installation went good and it was quiet like a stone. However, WLAN was not recognized and output on an external monitor did not work either (which did both work with 11.10). I need both. Beside that all seemed stable and good.
I searched a bit and found tools to control the fans etc. which is why I wanted to give 11.10 a second change (and I'm a bit into the "new stuff". This time the installation failed completely. The notebook got too hot during installation (seems as complex as DFT calculations of 100 atoms..

Now my question is: What should I do? Try to get the missing components in 10.04 working, try to get the temperature etc. issues in 11.10 solved, install a 32bit verion,..?
I don't need a detailed instruction, just jour basic approach and a few catchwords to search for..
Thanks in advance,
Holger
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