As I mentioned
earlier, I purchased an HP tc1100 tablet PC. It arrived earlier this week and I've been playing with it. Here are some of my initial impressions:
Debian stable (sarge) installed easily. The tc1100 has no optical drive, and I have no USB optical drive either. It also wouldn't boot from a CF card in my USB card reader. So I did a PXE (network) boot. I had never known that Debian's installer can boot over the network. VERY slick work, d-i team. During the installation, I noticed letter "Q" appearing on-screen periodically. I eventually determined that it would happen whenever I'd bump one of the mouse buttons. It also went away once I was using my own kernel, for whatever reason. The basic install was easy, no troubles at all. I was particularly impressed with the integration of ntfsresize these days. Being able to shrink down the XP partition to a very small size and then install Linux -- very nice indeed.
There are lots of pages about the tc1100 under Linux, so I won't rehash them all here. There are a few patches to the kernel to enable wireless support and the touchpad. All fairly straightforward. My unit uses the ipw2200 instead of the ipw2100 that everyone else seems to have, strangely enough.
The main thing I don't have yet is suspend-to-memory (ACPI state S3). Standby (ACPI state S1) doesn't have any noticable effect. With S3, the system will suspend, but crash on recovery. Can't quite figure it out.
I did get hibernate (suspend-to-disk) working. I just have to shut down PCMCIA and unload the b44 Ethernet driver before engaging it, and then it'll work fine. Not as nice as a true suspend, but still better than powering down all the time.
As far as apps go, the one that I really must mention so far is
Jarnal. It's an awesome program. At its simplest, it's just a set of pages you can draw on on-screen. But there's a lot more to it under the hood. First, it saves your work as a zipped set of SVG files, one per page. So you can load up your drawings into other programs later. Secondly, you can load up PDF files as the background, effectively letting you mark up documents and jot notes on them. Finally, there is a collaborative network mode that I haven't even tried yet. Jarnal is GPL'd, but it requires Java 1.4.x. If if weren't for that, I'd be uploading it to sid in a heartbeat.
I'll keep posting as I have more thoughts.
Comments
Fri, 05.09.2008 02:07
Republicans give lip service t o freedom and liberty but usua lly deliver a fascist form of socialism. Democrats tal [...]
Fri, 05.09.2008 00:43
First off, you mentioned "the Republicans know that their po licies aren't working" which i sn't actually true. The [...]
Fri, 05.09.2008 00:00
Though I ride to work in nothi ng like hurricane winds, I hav e been using an electric bike and it really helps figh [...]
Thu, 04.09.2008 21:23
Except that the Democrats aren 't talking about ending war, t hey are just looking to shift focus from Iraq to Afgha [...]
Thu, 04.09.2008 10:14
At least he didn't say, "A kan garoo!" http://forest.compl ete.org/posts/395-Kangaroos.ht ml
Wed, 03.09.2008 13:24
This sort of frustration comes into play when people don't u nderstand information manageme nt. Dell, being quite l [...]
Wed, 03.09.2008 12:20
I can't speak for John, and I (happily) haven't seen a recen t Dell catalog, but: I hav e yet to see a computer [...]
Wed, 03.09.2008 11:31
You falsely claimed that you f ound the materials sexually pr ovocative. That the supreme co urt ruled that the gover [...]