Tardis Mk III will be a Linux box....
Mar. 8th, 2008 03:26 pmSome time ago, I mentioned that I had dibs on an old Pentium III laptop at work. Earlier this week, we cleaned out two cubicles in preparation for new employees, and a lot of old and unused computer things were thrown out. One of the "things" was an old Gateway E4000 desktop, which I was using until last year, when the hard drive started to fail on it. I managed to vulch that machine, along with some mice, a power cord, a modem, and some phone and network cables. And Jeanne (our admin assistant) said that I could have the laptop.
And so, I took it home on Thursday night.
While cleaning out the carrying case, I came across a copy of Windows NT Workstation 4.0, Service Pack 5, and some old manuals. But that's not what I'm going to install on the laptop. Once I get a hard drive for it, I'm installing Ubuntu 7.10. I've already ran it from the laptop's CD-ROM, and it appears to work nicely. Especially the games. I'll just need to know how to install new hardware, when it comes time to do so -- floppy drive module, modem, network card, wireless network card, USB devices, etc.
For the Linux geeks out there -- and I really should make a filter -- how easy or difficult would it be to install these devices? I'm not expecting plug-and-play, which is one of Windows' main selling points (ease of use). Are drivers available?
Oh yeah. If you want to be included in my Linux filter, post a reply to this message. I'm already planning to include
autographedcat,
bikergeek, and
urban_terrorist.
And so, I took it home on Thursday night.
While cleaning out the carrying case, I came across a copy of Windows NT Workstation 4.0, Service Pack 5, and some old manuals. But that's not what I'm going to install on the laptop. Once I get a hard drive for it, I'm installing Ubuntu 7.10. I've already ran it from the laptop's CD-ROM, and it appears to work nicely. Especially the games. I'll just need to know how to install new hardware, when it comes time to do so -- floppy drive module, modem, network card, wireless network card, USB devices, etc.
For the Linux geeks out there -- and I really should make a filter -- how easy or difficult would it be to install these devices? I'm not expecting plug-and-play, which is one of Windows' main selling points (ease of use). Are drivers available?
Oh yeah. If you want to be included in my Linux filter, post a reply to this message. I'm already planning to include
no subject
Date: 2008-03-08 08:52 pm (UTC)On drivers, the wireless should be the toughest to get working. I would expect most other things to just work. Maybe not the modem, if it's a winmodem.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-08 09:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-03-09 02:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-03-09 03:16 am (UTC)If you send me the model number and revision number, I can do some research. I found some back when I was looking for a linux-compatible card. (And I found one which I currently have no real use for, so if yours doesn't work, let me know and I'll see about getting you the one I have here somewhere.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-09 03:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-03-09 04:38 pm (UTC)http://ubuntuforums.org/printthread.php?t=5645.
(And of course, that's a couiple of years old, so things may have gotten better since then.)