Archive for the 'Tabletries' Category

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Creative Floop

Hmm, well I haven’t been as successful as I’d hoped WRT the *creativity!!* but I did finally get my computer fixed.

It turned out 256mb of my 512mb wasn’t seated properly. I’ve been cursing it for about a month now, and just in time for its birthday today, in one of its (now ended) everconstant fits of disk thrashing, I notice it only sees a portion of what it should. Duh.

I now have ceaseless pity for anyone trying to do work on a system with 256mb of RAM as I know how disk-centric you are (dern thrashing disk–kersh, kersht, kersk is all you hear constantly). The trick was that I changed my memory and hard drive at the same time and didn’t consider that the memory might not have seated right when I got it in from the Toshiba recall-replacement service.

I managed to corrupt vital pieces of both my internal and external hard drives in the week following the changes due to my frustrations. Easily enough fixed with chkdsk but still. Ohh the silkyness of this computer I’d thought was strangely slow but couldn’t prove, and now is redeemed. I was losing my edge, the computer was no longer an extension of my physical being, too frelling slow, almost a phantom limb.

Back to the creativity, sort of. Well yah, I could blame my failure there on my laptop too but really it is the fault of a few other computers in the house. Blizzard’s World of Warcraft promised a game where a bunch of Westerners (J. Harnish, Adam B., Jesse, Me, Alex D., et alii) could hang out, not to mention the Techdeskers. My patience with soloing died today as it does with most single-player games after a certain bit of time (I very rarely finish them). I think what I like most is learning about a new game and when all it’s implementation specifics seem to be exhausted, like most things, I am left bored slashing at beasts. My brothers continue playing after I’ve explained every possible gaming tip I could peck out to them. I watch, find a few more and repeat every once-a-while. It’s a nice pattern. I’ll have fun hanging out on it anyway.

Linux is still on the growing todo. I want to reinstall my server and get it working on the laptop so that I can come to school and reinstall it on my desktop. Days are ticking away from my free time, wish I could fully appreciate this blissful stress-free worktime properly. How to generate a marginal amount of stress? I’ve got at minimum three other projects which I’ve promised people and I can’t garner enough to really get much done earlier than 3am, often 5am.

Finally saw Garden state tonight, watched it twice through like my younger brothers are prone to with movies and decided that it was enjoyable like Lost in Translation, but that I am now drama’d out after this and Napoleon Dynamite and I’m not sure if I can survive through Good Bye Lenin, which I also rented.

Victory: Topologilinux/Debian Hybrid on the M200

I just finished installing Debian GNU/Linux (as much as one can finish installing Linux) on my Toshiba M200 Tablet (thanks to these linux links for smoothing the stumbling toward the end). More or less everything is functioning as it should. The install was special because I started with Topologilinux‘s installer, a slackware based distro which features support for NTFS loopback image install. In other words I didn’t have to repartition or even change from NTFS on the tablet. I’d had enough low-level futzing with all the buggy custom XP Tablet PC edition CD and SP2 installer debacles I’ve run though.

A portion of the Topologilinux installer runs in windows and generates the blank voids (aka swap-like files) for Linux to use safely. One for the base and one for the swap. It also sets up a new version of the Grub bootloader, w32grub, which runs cleanly and kindly underneith the windows default NTDLR. The installer, in the wonderful tradition of windows installer is as simple as few textboxes and next-next-next. So I potentially have a Linux install that I can scoot around or easily backup should I run out of disk space on the small 40gb drive. Or delete/restore with a simple edit of the boot.ini.

Anyway, back to how I installed. I edited the C:/boot/menu.lst grub menu file to have another entry which used the topologilinux kernel with the debian initial root directory (initrd) called root.bin,which you might extract from the debian bootcd’s rescue.bin boot floppy image, with an app like WinImage (I mounted it under linux while I was trying to get all this figured out). Drop that in the C:/boot directory, edit the file, and reboot picking your new entry. I mounted the NTFS drive rw (so I can make a mess inside the swappish file). I set up the loopback with:

mkdir /mnt/ntfs
mount -t ntfs -o rw /dev/hda1 /mnt/ntfs
losetup /dev/loop0 /mnt/ntfs/tlinux4/base.img
losetup /dev/loop1 /mnt/ntfs/tlinux4/swap.img
mkswap /dev/loop1 (CAREFUL!)
(format /dev/loop0 with the fs of choice)
swapon /dev/loop1
mount /dev/loop0 /target/

Then I simply proceeded with the debian base install with their utility. After that I had to dig in the CD image for Topologilinux to get the kernel-modules package (which since it’s slackware is simply tgz) and wade through it to find the e100 ethernet module. Debian is amazing once you have ethernet. You just `apt-get install` to your heart’s content.

I compiled the 2.6 kernel with debian’s kernel package and ran across another large bump. This took me ages to figure out. Not only do you have to explicitly complile initrd, loopback and ram disk support (in block devices) for all this to work but for Kernel 2.6 you need to add ramdisk_size=10000 to your grub configuration otherwise the kernel panics on boot RAMDISK: incomplete write (-28 != 32768) You also can’t have “devfs mounting on boot” in the kernel for the Topologilinux initrd’s linuxrc script to run properly.

I have an Atheros card in my tablet so I grabbed the cvs of the madwifi drivers from sourceforge (see cvs tab) and compiled them into my 2.6 kernel with the kernel-sources I’d downloaded. (after apt-getting cvs and sharutils)

After getting all the software online with my nice XFCE desktop using the instructions provided at those linux links provided earlier (also, for alsa–add your users to the audio group). I tried out xstroke, gok, xkbd. xstroke is okay, but I don’t particularly want to learn scribbles or any pda scribble techniques. I’m kind of partial to the Windows TIP way. Maybe the Mono team can get the Ink stuff to run in Linux some day. Gok is nice but so many features I couldn’t figure out how to get it totally set up in my time available. xkbd is plain and simple, no preference window so I had to look up fonts manually and flag them in, meh.

Wow, 20 hours of mussing round it all boils to a page of solutions. Linux is such a frelling timesink when you run into the odd corner. Hope this helps someone. At least I’m not running gentoo anymore, this same system would’ve likely taken 10x as long with extra maintenance over there and I’m more familiar with that distro (sadly). It sucked up thousands of hours in 2003 when I managed to go a full year with the dubious Linux Only title until I got this tablet on Dec 31 (coincidentally exactly a year from when I installed it to a few hours). That and people started playing addictive FPS games in the dorms and managed to drag me into them, which required having Windows running and dual-booting like crazy.

Now that I have this crazy setup running I wonder if I could rig it to something even crazier…use coLinux to optionally use my linux INSIDE windows or booted on the hardware. The excitement never ends! I’d also be interested in setting up a mini NETBSD install on the SD card similiar in function to the HP/Compaq tablet’s QuickInfo (err?) feature. I could hibernate windows then reboot and pick the SD card on the BIOS screen. It wouldn’t mount the hard drive and only light the screen. Wonder how much battery this would save, if any…




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