A Series of Unfortunate Events, and Recommendations for Linux Support
January 29th, 2006 by Mark Rittman
I just got in an hour or so ago after a week spent over in Ireland. As I
mentioned the other day, I was due to do a bit of presales work with a public
sector client, and I took the opportunity to
spend the
weekend in Belfast with Janet and the kids and the rest of her family over
there. Amazingly, for once the weather over in Belfast was better than back home
and we spent Saturday around town, down by the new
Titanic
Quarter and in W5. W5 is a kind of
"Science Museum and kids play centre" at the Odyssey Centre with lots of
interactive
displays,
multimedia PCs and a
kids play area,
not a bad way to spend a January afternoon if you’ve got children to keep
occupied.

One thing that didn’t go so well last week was the gradual breakdown of all
the technology I took over with me. As per usual I took over enough gadgets with
me to fill a branch of Dixons, with my work laptop, iPod, 3G data card, mobile
phone and lots of little add-ons and accessories. Things started to go wrong on
Monday when my laptop’s hard disk started spinning and whirring and clicking
when I tried to boot it up, and I had to wait until about two hours after I
first switched it on before the "Welcome to Windows XP" screen came up. The same
thing happened again the next day, and so I started copying all the files onto
my external hard disk in case it was about to give up on me for good. Next, and
presumably completely unrelated, the light behind the LCD screen went, which
meant that I had to borrow a flat screen monitor from the client to get any work
done. By this time though the disk had started working OK again - strange.
Next calamity though was me dropping the laptop backpack on the floor, which
didn’t affect the laptop but broke the 3G data card that was still plugged in
the PCMCIA slot - so that’s what the PC Card carrying case was for… These
things happen though, so although I could only use my laptop with an external
monitor, and I’d lost 3G access, I still had my phone … or at least I did have
it, until on Saturday morning the on/off switch on the top of it broke, and I
couldn’t use the phone now either.
Anyway, the upshot of all this was that by Saturday morning I’d managed to
break my laptop, 3G card and mobile phone and I was reduced to using Teletext to
catch up with the football scores (Arsenal still lost, which softened the blow
somewhat) and my brother-in-law’s PC running Windows Me and with a 26k
connection to try and keep up with emails. Eventually even I saw the futility of
this and decided to take a break from it all until I got back to England.
As I’m now in the market for a phone (work’ll replace the laptop and 3G card,
thankfully) it got me thinking again about getting one with decent (or any, to
be honest) Linux synchronization support. Every year or so I go through a phase
where I try and migrate my work and home PCs to Linux - for the obvious reasons
really, it’s just the "right" thing to do, and it’s some good experience that’ll
be useful for work - but I always get scuppered by poor driver and peripheral
support. Now that I’m suddenly in the market for a new phone, it sounds like a
good chance to get one that is syncable using GNOME or KDE. Does anyone know of
a phone - a recent one, ideally something by Nokia or SonyEricsson - that syncs
out of the box with GNOME or KDE? If it helps, I’m on Orange in the UK, usually
sync using a USB cable, and ideally want to sync with Evolution or Thunderbird
although being honest syncing with anything would be a bonus.
Whilst we’re on the hardware subject I’ve recently been given a budget for
getting new laptops for the team at work and we usually get stuff like this from
Dell - no problems here and I’ve never had a problem with them before, excepting
the laptop backlight going out of course. What I’m looking for particularly now
though is a range of laptops, ideally backed by a mainstream vendor such as
Dell, IBM, HP and so on - where all of the hardware has Linux drivers. I’d like
to get my team working with Linux if possible - or at least make it easy for
them - and what I’m looking for is a laptop range where the Wifi cards, modems
and so on have easy to obtain, working Linux drivers. I think for the Dell
machine I use - a Precision M60 - you can get Wifi working with
third-party drivers from a company called Linuxant but what I really want is
a machine where the vendor sorts out the drivers for you. If anyone knows or
uses such a setup please write in and let me know.
That’s it for now. On Tuesday we’ve got the
UKOUG Business
Intelligence & Reporting Tools SIG, where I’ll hopefully be meeting up with
Peter Scott and listening to
Jeff
Moss’s presentation on Data Warehouse Performance Tuning. After that, I’ve
got a few days off and we’re flying over to Nice, so updates will be a bit
irregular for the next week or so.
January 30th, 2006 at 1:47 pm
Good grief. Well at least you got your full year’s quota of technology disasters out of the way in one go in January
Teletext — that stalwart, reliable source of information when the information superhighway fails you utterly. Wonderful. Somewhere in London, there’s a bank of aged BBC micros still diligently serving up the latest footy scores in eight color glory.
January 30th, 2006 at 1:52 pm
I don’t know what distro you plan on using, but Knoppix has all sorts of drivers out of the box. I’ve been using it on my pc at home, actually, I’ve been so lazy with my PC at home, I just boot it up with the cdrom. Yeah, I know, I’m lazy. I have windows on it and I haven’t gotten around to moving some of my files off of it. So I haven’t done an install.
Anyway, if you haven’t tried that distro, you should.
Mike
January 30th, 2006 at 5:23 pm
I think Pat Robertson would agree with me if I point out that it was perhaps God trying to tell you to take a BREAK from all this techno stuff you lug around!!!
Anurag
January 31st, 2006 at 2:02 pm
Hi Mark,
I have been successfully using opensource ndiswrapper ( http://ndiswrapper.sourceforge.net ) for my usb based netgear wifi adaptor on my Suse Linux home pc. It’s a linux wrapper for using your existing Windows wifi drivers; so no need to look for supporting linux drivers.
Regarding full vendor support; you can search Suse Linux CERTFIED hardware database ( http://developer.novell.com/yessearch/Search.jsp ) to know the list of notebooks supported.
-Prasad
January 31st, 2006 at 4:54 pm
I have a Thinkpad T42 and it works perfectly in Linux. LAN, wireless, sound all work out of the box (I might have had to download the wireless driver source code separately due to licensing issues). For serious stuff I’m all Linux (I don’t even have Windows on my machine at work) although I occasionally have to resort to it on the laptop for games.
I use Debian unstable for everything, but I like to live on the edge. If you’re going to be installing vendor software, unstable might not be as suitable.
February 15th, 2006 at 5:01 am
Mark,
Beware that not all of the Oracle tools work on Linux, and some that do will only work on Red Hat Enterprise (which you have to pay for).
Having said that probably the best out of the box Linux experience these days is Ubuntu. They are especially focussed on getting their distribution to work out of the box with as much OEM hardware as possible. Check out the Wiki page where they reference all of the laptops they have used/tested;
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/HardwareSupportMachinesLaptops
If I was you I’d get a short list of which laptops fit my team’s requirements and then check their compatibility on the Ubuntu wiki.
I had a pain free installation of Ubuntu on my work laptop and only boot into Windows when I absolutely have to.
Alternatively you could just buy them all Macbook Pro’s and hope that Oracle are porting all of their software to OSX
April 2nd, 2007 at 3:46 pm
I’m currently using an HP nc8430 laptop ( core2 duo 2ghz, 4gig ram + SATA drive ). I’m running with 64 bits support ( x86_64 ) and i’m using almost everything from Oracle that is possible under Linux.
The distribution is built from RedHat source and everything including updates are free. Support for wireless intel ipw3945 is built-in. I had to install the ATI driver from ATI, but that was easy.
https://www.scientificlinux.org/