I have seen some reports (and seen it myself) of badly presented webbooks in store. One store I went to the display unit was missing, another it was switched off. Other people have seen even worse which I responded to later in the thread. Up to now I had assumed that the display models did not require special treatment and should just be exactly what you get if you buy one. Seems I may have to rethink that assumption. So what do you think would be the best way to present the webbook in store? I don’t really like the idea of a locked down rolling presentation. I want people to pick it up and play with it. What do you think?
Archive for August, 2008
So what should we do with the in-store display models?
Sunday, August 31st, 2008Thankyou for the music
Saturday, August 30th, 2008If you are into music, and like to explore stuff you perhaps have not heard before then there is a little gem hidden in the webbook. Go to Applications-Sound & Video-Rhythmbox Music Player. This is a music manager, somewhat similar in concept to Apple iTunes. It can rip CDs, manage music on MP3 players and contains not one but two music stores. I will followup later with more detail on ripping CDs and messing about with MP3 (you need to install a few extra odds and sods from Synaptic to get the most from it) but today lets concentrate on the music stores. The first is Magnatune, click on this and it will download the catalog, you can then browse and play lots and lots of music. 8068 tracks that would take 22 days, 4 hours and 40 minutes to play back to back. You can buy the music too for a reasonable cost. None of it has any evil DRM, these are all MP3 files (the first time you use it you might have to let it install some plugins to let it decode the MP3 files) you can move about and put on different devices. I quite liked Lizzi and Myles Cochran, but your tastes may vary.
Next up is Jamendo, now this is a very big music store, 62428 tracks which would last 180 days, 7 hours and 49 minutes to play back to back. Now to be fair there is an awful lot of awful music in there, but if you are prepared to sit and listen for six months solid I am sure you will find something that appeals to you!
Flash! Ah-ahh He’ll save every one of us
Saturday, August 30th, 2008Just like Windows, Linux ships without support for the Adobe Flash player. Flash may be free as in no cost, but it is not Free as in Free Software so should not be redistributed. (A few early webbooks may have escaped the factory with Flash installed though.) The good news is that installing Flash on Ubuntu Linux is a lot easier than installing it on Windows. In fact installing pretty much anything you could ever want is easier on Ubuntu than Windows.
Start by going to System-Administration-Synaptic Package Manager. Because you are installing or removing applications that could impact other users of the webbook you will need to put in your password to get superuser priviledges (so you have to be the primary user or a user given administrator rights by the primary user).
There are a few ways of finding what you want, you can simply scroll down the list of packages or start typing the first few characters of the package you want and it will jump down to the right place, or hit the search button and it will find what you want even if you don’t know the package name.
For Flash you want the flashplugin-nonfree package. Feel free to mark anything else that looks interesting, then hit the Apply button to have the system automatically download and set everything up for you. Restart Firefox and you can see YouTube, BBC iPlayer, games and stories on the Cbeebies website and a whole lot more irritating adverts than before.

If Flash adverts annoy you then you could give the flashblock package a try, it is just above the flashplugin-nonfree package.
Free as in Free eggs
Friday, August 29th, 2008I started this story on our other blog but I think I will continue it here. In the last installment I was just waiting for the coop to arrive and beginning to design a run.
Last weekend when we got back from Ireland we had some arrivals, Miss White:

Goldie:

and Henrietta:

Miss White and Goldie are already laying one Free egg per day, Henrietta should start soon. So how much do Free eggs cost? Well quite a bit really. £20 per bird, £100 for the coop, about £100 for the materials for the run that I made. £10 for the feed dispenser, £10 for the water thing, about £20 for some food and corn and grit and worm stuff. I spent an evening assembling the coop and a couple of weeks of evenings building the run (if you ever need to attach chicken wire to a wooden frame don’t use a manual staple gun, get an electric one like I didn’t). I now spend a bit of time every morning letting them out and filling up the food and a bit more time every evening putting them away and shoveling an astonishing amount of chicken poo into the compost. It would be a lot less money and effort to just buy eggs from the supermarket. But I don’t want to do that, because these eggs are Free, and that is cool! To bring the topic back to the webbook, the software on the webbook is Free. Free as in Freedom, Free as in Free Range, Free as in Free eggs. Sometimes it can require a bit more effort than the supermarket variety, but it is much much better because you can see everything that went into it.
Keep the noise down!
Friday, August 29th, 2008Another errata item for you. This one we will fix in an automatic update, but if you are impatient and like to fiddle then you can do the fix yourself in advance.
Basically the issue is that when you plug in headphones and listen to something the webbook speakers don’t get turned off automatically. This kind of defeats the point of plugging in the headphones and is not commuter train friendly.
The problem is that the sound driver works for all sorts of different laptops and desktops with all sorts of different speaker/microphone/headphone/SPDIF configurations. It takes a guess as to what layout it should be using, but sometimes gets it wrong. We need to give the driver module a hint by telling it what the layout is. To do this we add a file in the /etc/modprobe.d directory and with a line of text in it. This is a sensitive area so we have to be the superuser to mess with files in that area.
OK, lets get started. Log in to the webbook as normal (as the primary user if you have set up multiple users)
Press Alt+F2 to bring up the run program dialog, in there type in gksudo gedit /etc/modprobe.d/options-webbook-audio

this will ask for your password and launch gedit, which is like notepad, but better. Now type in the following line:
options snd_hda_intel model=lenovo-101e
yep, thats right, we tell the sound driver(snd_hda_intel) this is a Lenovo laptop (eeepc-701 also seems to work but I think we should stick to lenovo-101e) save and exit and restart the webbook (it might just start working straight away without a reboot – probably depends on what the card is doing at the time of the change)
and finally, let me know if it works.
When the automatic update happens we will update /etc/modprobe.d/options-webbook and you will have two copies of the “options snd_hda_intel model=lenovo-101e” line in your modprobe.d directory. This does not appear to cause any problems, however do please remember that you did this just in case one day the driver changes and we might for example set the model to “webbook”
Staying up-to-date with your webbook
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
Every so often there will be some updates and enhancements available for your webbook. The webbook will automatically check for these whenever you are online. If it finds an update then it will let you know by showing a little orange star in the top panel. When you have a bit of spare time and want to download the updates (perhaps on a wifi connection, probably not whilst roaming on 3G) you can click the icon to start the update manager and pull down the updates.

it will then let you know what updates are available and you can look at the full description of each update before you download and install it. Here I have 8 updates to collect:

I pressed the Install Updates button and start downloading my 2.1 megabytes of updates.

1 minute 34 seconds remaining. I think I will go and put the kettle on.

The kettle has just boiled and the webbook has collected all the updates, it is now going to spend a minute or so installing them.

So now my webbook is fully updated and I can sit down with a nice cup of coffee (white, no sugar).
A giant amongst laptops
Thursday, August 21st, 2008Here is my webbook out and about on the amazing hexagonal basalt columns of the Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland. It is really quite remote and surrounded by very big cliffs but I managed to pick up a weak GPRS signal on the dongle and I slowly looked up the Wikipedia page for the causeway.

Drivers for those who want to downgrade to Windows XP
Thursday, August 14th, 2008I know some people want to put a legal copy of Windows XP on their webbook, quite why you would want to do that is a mystery to me, but for those that do we are now providing the drivers for the hardware. The full package is a 51.4MB zip file and I checked it works (well I checked the zip file uncompresses, I didn’t check the drivers work – I don’t have a copy of Windows XP).
Thanks for the memory
Thursday, August 14th, 2008A few people have asked me about memory upgrades for the webbook, it comes with 512MB of RAM which isn’t bad when running Ubuntu, but some people (me for example) just can’t leave things alone and want to shovel in as much RAM as will fit. So this begs the question, “how much RAM will fit?” so I did some research to find out.
It turns out that the webbook has a single SO-DIMM slot in the little compartment on the base of the webbook, below the touchpad. The module it is fitted with is a 512MB 200pin SODIMM DDR2 PC-4200. Breaking this down, 512MB is the capacity of the module, half a gigabyte. It is a 200pin SODIMM which is the shape of the package and the number of little copper connectors (you don’t have to count them all). SODIMM modules can be DDR and DDR2 and the little notch is slightly different on each so you can’t fit the wrong type. You want DDR2 for the webbook. PC2-4200 relates to the speed of the memory. You can fit faster memory which might be labled PC2-5200 or PC2-6400 however the speed is limited by something called the frontside bus so the webbook will just treat it as PC2-4200. I tested a 1 GB PC2-5200 module but the memtest86 benchmark showed it running at the same speed as the original PC-4200 module. I have a 2GB module on order, which is apparently the maximum the webbook will support, but I am not sure if that is just because there don’t appear to be any 4GB SODIMM modules available yet.
RAM can be delicate so if you are going to change the memory first find a sensible place to work with no dust and no obvious sources of static. Unplug the webbook from the power and take out the battery, then just undo the two screws holding the RAM compartment shut. Carefully push out the shiny catches at each side then the RAM module will pop up. You can then slide it out. Pop in the new module and push it down against the springs until it clips into place. Don’t force it, if it doesn’t want to go then check that it is fully inserted. If the notch doesn’t seem to be in the right place then you have a DDR module which won’t work.
Once your memory is in, put the cover on and screw it back together, refit the battery and switch on. After the bios hit escape to get to the Grub menu. From here you should see the Memtest86 option. Go down and select that and let it test your memory. Let it run until your boredom threshold is reached and if there are no errors then hit escape to turn off and then you can boot up normally. If you do find an error then just send the memory back.
| Brand | Spec | Tested by | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Novatec | 1GB PC2-5300 | Alan Bell | |
| Dane Elec (via eBay) | 2GB PC2-5300 | Craig Jump | |
| Crucial | 1GB 200PIN DDR2 SODIMM 128MX64 PC2-5300 | Jonathan Kay | |
| Corsair | 2GB Corsair Value Select, DDR2 SO-DIMM PC2-5300 (667), 200 Pin, Non-ECC Unbuffered, CAS 5 | Stuart Taylor | |
| Crucial | 2GB, DDR2 SO-DIMM PC2-4200, 200 Pin | Alan Bell | |

Action Shot #1: out and about with the webbook
Tuesday, August 12th, 2008Here is the first in a series of action shots of the webbook finding interesting uses, Helen H writes:
“I got one because I’m a freelance researcher with AQA (Any Question Answered) and wanted to be able to work when I’m away in my campervan. A full-size laptop takes up too much room; the webbook & dongle is the perfect combination to do a bit of work when I have an odd hour to spare without taking up valuable space. I was already an Ubuntu user so was delighted to find it used this OS. It is also, of course, great great fun!”

If you have an action shot to share then please post a comment and tell me about it.