James Ogley
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© 1995 - 2008
James Ogley

All views expressed on this site are my own. They do not necessarily reflect those of the Parish of Bursledon, the Diocese of Winchester or the Church of England. As such, I do not expect them all to be popular but you, the reader, can certainly expect them to be honest.

I bought Amanda a Samsung R60plus laptop for Christmas and, while it's a very nice laptop, it has caused some degree of pain so far. This is by no means a full technical review, just a comment on my experiences with it.

First, the good things. It's based on an Intel Core2 Duo CPU with 1G of RAM, this makes it pretty nippy, the dual core of the CPU makes for a noticeable performance jump over my Core Solo-based laptop. The onboard graphics adaptor is an ATI Radeon and the openSUSE ATI guidelines worked perfectly. These drive a very clear and easy to view 15.4 widescreen LCD at 1280x800. The huge hard drive (120G) has plenty of space for the pre-installed VistaTM and openSUSE 10.3.

Now, here come the problems. The wired network adaptor couldn't be detected and configured during install meaning that I couldn't add online repositories. I proceeded with the installation and installing from the DVDs went very smoothly and quickly but after the installation, the machine apparently would not boot Linux. A bit of experimenting with kernel command-line options revealed that the ACPI stack was the problem. This became Novell bug #350717 and also served to explain why the network adaptor hadn't worked during installation. The default boot option now has acpi=off while I await responses on that bug. The bug incidentally means no power management and the machine doesn't power-off on shutdown.

The wireless adaptor doesn't work, period. lspci reports it as being based on an Atheros chipset so naturally, I downloaded and installed the MadWiFi openSUSE drivers but no dice. So, I tried ndiswrapper following the openSUSE guidelines for Ndiswrapper on Atheros chipsets. This showed some improvement as I could now see my wireless network in NetworkManager but couldn't connect even with no encryption enabled on the router. Now, I can't help but wonder if this is in someway related to the ACPI issue but I can't be sure - especially the MadWiFi issue. I decided to buy a USB dongle that would work and settled on a Ralink based Edimax dongle after seeing it listed on Linux Emporium's Linux-friendly WiFi page. This uses the rt2x00-kmp-* package which is part of the openSUSE core distribution. Cue another bug: Novell bug #350956 and this also doesn't seem to work. Thankfully, with ACPI disabled, the wired adaptor works with the sky2 module so Amanda can at least get online in my study.

Now, some good news and something weird to finish with. It's a little thing but the R60plus has an SD slot in the front. My Asus A6J has one in the side. Mine doesn't work but the one in the R60plus does exactly what you'd hope. Plug in an SD card and it's detected and mounted. If it appears to be from a digital camera, it's treated as such by gnome-volume-manager. Excellent. The weird thing is that plugging speakers or headphones into the headphone mini-jack doesn't cut the internal speakers. It's not a software issue because it's the same in both OSs.