WoofyDugfock
Group: Members
Posts: 146
Joined: Sep. 2004 |
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Posted: May 08 2005,12:06 |
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Thanks v much to you both for the feedback and for bearing with my thinking-out-loud.
As far as both laptops having unremarkable crunchy salad processors, I guess I accept that's all you get for the low price tag. I would have thought, though, that dsl running toram would decide it's the space shuttle taking off on one of these, as opposed to being rooted and green. I'm used to running dsl toram on a p3 ~860Mhz desktop with lots of RAM, on which it seems fast indeed.
From here:
Quote | ...bear in mind that the cheapest processor you can buy new today is plenty fast enough for Linux. So if dropping back a speed level or two brings you in under budget, you can do it with no regrets. |
This same guy also says that front side bus and disk I/0 are far more important than the processor itself for linux. Both laptops are supposed to have 400Mhz FSB. I'm still very green about the ears (probably the testicles as well) about such things -- is this ok?
It seems that the beef with Celeron M's is their 512kB cache (still better than the early ones) and lack of Speedstep. I note the posters here seem to see no noticeable performance difference as compared to the desktop Celeron D 2.6-2.8 in non-intensive type applications (still Celery) but one says the mobile AthlonXP will "whoop" the Celeron 330.
I imagine the hd seek times are poor though - haven't tried to find out about this yet.
But if Celeron is a particularly bad piece of vegetable for the $, then please let me know ....
I recall seeing other complaints about the big blue BIOS elsewhere, but neither that nor the vegetable seems to deter these commercial outfits from shipping them with linux.
There seems to be a consensus that IBM laptops are generally physically among the most durable around (their hinge design in particular is strong, apparently).
I'd still prefer a widescreen though (to be honest, only for movies) if I could be convinced dsl could be made to look sharp on it.
According to linux on laptops, you fix the horizontal stretching (part of the problem with the Acer 1414) by increasing the horizontal frame length etc etc, which means changing some timing numbers in Xconfig.
No-one has any experience of this type of adjustment?
-------------- "We don't need no stinkin' Windows"
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/linuxunix/0,39020390,39149796,00.htm
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