Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
I sure don't, I'm running cinnamon. :)
Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
DawnLight
Excuse me, kansasnoob, but what does Edubuntu and classic gnome have to do with pae, please?
Nothing other than the fact that you can still install a non-pae 12.04 version of Ubuntu and use the lightweight metacity window manager up until April 2017.
And in that reply I was specifically referring to the OP's reference to LTSP :)
Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kansasnoob
7bit's fake-pae ppa is used by both mörgæs and me to make the pae operating system accept Pentium M CPUs. It works well; we have seen no problem. But we need to warn, that some Pentium M CPUs may not work with pae, so we ask each user to run
and check if it reports 36 bit physical address size.
Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sudodus
So I should add Edubuntu 12.04 to the list of available systems in post #1?
No. Only Lubuntu and Xubuntu 12.04 live images shipped with non-pae kernels, but there are still updated non-pae 12.04 netboot images available:
http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/dis...tboot/non-pae/
I only suggest using the "classic gnome" UI because I know it's supported by Edubuntu until April 2017 whereas Xubuntu 12.04 chose only a 3 year support cycle, and Lubuntu chose only an 18 month support cycle :)
Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
New: Instructions how to make install USB drive from Windows with graphical user interface tools
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Lubuntu-fake-PAE
Edit: Now the current detailed instructions also reside at the Ubuntu wiki and are easily available from the page above.
Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
There is a new alternative to install Ubuntu based operating systems into computers of various age and kind, also Celeron M and Pentium M computers, the One Button Installer, the 'OBI'.
The OBI is designed to be easy to use and have a very small foot-print. It uses only standard programs and shell-scripts in text mode. Installed systems with non-PAE kernels or fake-PAE are portable between many computers, and they are stored in compressed tar archive files, tarballs.
Code:
GnomeClassic1204-oem.tar.gz
GnomeClassic1204.tar.gz
lubuntu-10.04.tar.gz # good for old systems but past end of life of desktop packages
Lubuntu_13.04sept1.tar.gz
lxle-2013-08-19.tar.gz
OneButtonInstaller_blank-noswap.tar.gz
saucyalfa2.tar.gz
saucybeta1.tar.gz # new
ubuntu-10.04.tar.gz # good for old systems but past end of life of desktop packages
The OBI helps you make such a tarball of your own system and use it as a backup or to port the system to another computer.
Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
I'm using a less-discussed install on a Thinkpad R31 Celeron -- Snow Linux 4.0 XFCE. XFCE worked but it wasn't snappy. I discovered I also had Gnome classic as an option. That works pretty well. The Intel graphics chip - 82801?? - seems like a real problem child. I tried their E17 live CD but couldn't get it to load into a live session. This is using a modern kernel, 3.5.x or 3.8.x and is supported until I think 2016.
Re: What OS are you running with Pentium M and what do you want next?
Sometimes it helps to change the Xorg acceleration method to UXA. See this excerpt from a conversation in the Lubuntu community mail.
Quote:
John Hupp <lubuntu@prpcompany.com> wrote:
There was this helpful bug report on file at
http://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+so...x/+bug/1178982.
It described behavior on Dell PC's with integrated Intel graphics, in which Adobe Flash Player would display only with shades of purple and green in a horizontally compressed window (or at least that's how I would describe what I see on a Dell Dimension 2400).
The work-around (Comment #1) was to change the Xorg acceleration method to UXA.
User reported a work-around:
-o-
Edit (or create) /etc/X11/xorg.conf as follows: (ugh, can't format, should be a tab before each line except the first and the last).
Code:
Section "Device"
Identifier "Intel Graphics"
Driver "intel"
Option "AccelMethod" "uxa"
EndSection
Restart X (reboot, restart your display manager, whatever). Colors are back to the way they used to be and flash works.
-o-
I forgot to include, however, that the bug workaround messes up the login screen (LightDM). You can make out an entry box that one assumes is for the password entry, but everything else is largely unidentifiable.
So as a workaround it leaves a lot to be desired, unless we can also figure out how to fix the login screen.
-o-
Nio Wiklund wrote:
This method works for me to restore good graphics in an old IBM Thinkcentre with Lubuntu Saucy alpha-2 and the following Intel graphics.
VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation 82865G Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 02)
There is no issue with the login screen.