Eee 701 update flash


















A menu came up which allowed me to install the operating system. Make sure you have copied any of your personal files to a separate SD card, as this installation wipes out the all the SSD contents with a new file system!

I noted from previous installations that there might be a question about video size during installation. There were a series of prompts about the keyboard, time zone, and disk partition. For the disk partition, I selected to use the entire disk wiping out all the previous contents. Less than an hour after starting the installation, the system was installed. And the "National Bureau of Standards" were right on the mark. So no, it would be impossible for a netbook to create enough magnetic fields to damage a hard drive.

What is most likely happening is crosstalk. Which shouldn't damage anything, just plain annoying. The only computer equipment which I never personally experienced, but sounds believable is by placing a floppy on top of a CRT monitor and turn it on.

When you turn them on, a coil aka degaussing coil creates a strong enough magnetic field to de-magnetise the screen.

Which appears to can also instantly erase a floppy with some CRT monitor designs. Well I am not suing TigerDirect, like Dell is either. But I have been buying from them for over 10 years. And I can safely say that some of the stuff they sell is really great and some of what they sell is pure junk. And even if you are an expert, it is hard to tell until you get your hands on it. Larry was talking about 64GB and you are talking about GB.

I personally think the OS and applications doesn't need anything near either amount. And that drive doesn't need to be the same as the OS and applications. In fact, it doesn't need to be connected until you need it. And it could be on anything, hard drive, flash, DVD, or whatever. Take your pick! They said the same about the horses. Although it is virtually impossible to find a hitching post or a watering trough today.

Besides, Mark Twain also said: "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics. That so called better deal netbook won't go very far. Ask anybody who bought the bottom of the line to anything electronic. The newness and the thrill only lasts briefly and then it is over. That doesn't seem like a good buy to me. But hey, Larry has lots of these nifty gadgets already.

So it would make sense for him. Otherwise he would just spend his extra money on women is my guess. The better choice is the former IMHO if you are going to spend it anyway.

As women are far more expensive anyway. No, what is most likely happening is that acoustic vibration from the speaker are causing head crashes inside the hard drive. Regarding magnetics, it is virtually impossible for anything outside the drive to magnetically erase the media. Magnetic strength varies by inverse square law. The head is within microns of the platter. By the time you are one-inch away, there is no common source of magnetic field that is strong enough to alter the data.

Bulk tape erasers that draw hundreds of watts and that are designed to do just that can SOMETIMES manage to do it at just about an inch the ones designed for 2-inch video tape long obsolete that drew over 1, watts could barely do it.

Yes it is true. I have heard stories from time to time during the old floppies and CRT era, that people have lost the data if they left a floppy on top of a monitor and then turn it on. I tried this with my monitors, but I could never wipe out any floppies with any of my monitors. I have seen this on my Celeron Toshibas, Gateways, and Asus. This doesn't bother me as batteries are easy to remove anyway.

And you should do that anyway even if this problem isn't present to keep the heat away from the batteries. I heard one report that not all Celeron CPUs does this. Although I don't know anything more about this one case. I also have other devices that also drains the batteries when off. My FM transmitter is very bad about this. My Dodge van also has a 70ma drain. So if I don't plan to use it in a week or more which is often , I remove the battery cable.

One guys test of the Eee PC battery when off: "It was recharged and left without use. Have you tested yours? I believe all of mine are worse than that. No I haven't. But I know that if I leave the 2G Surf off the charger for a few days starting from a full charge it is down one bar on the next use.

So I usually leave it on the charger all the time as the 2G only gets a little over 2 hours with the WiFi on from a full start. I was surprised to find that my HD same capacity battery gets more time around 2. The 2G runs much hotter so that is probably is where much of its power is wasted.

Here is what I remember I'll check it later to make sure. Even though the batteries look alike they are not interchangeable. I run a lot of DivX video and wifi speed streaming video on my netbooks. I have no idea "why", but the NC10 runs these videos and streams smoother than the rest I tried. There's even a little overhead left over so the Email checking doesn't trash the movie. No more page swapping and it multitasks quite a bit better with some memory left over.

We're talking about a bare Ubuntu install, no crap on it. I'd always install If you are using Windows, you can simply download the IDE software, install it like a normal The Asus EEEpc netbook model - the first model they came out with several Ubuntu's Netbook version I downloaded the Image for Ubuntu's 'minimal installer' off the net and Instead of the tutorial below for the , you can simply download the latest Has anyone sucessfully installed on an ASUS eeepc?

The eeePC I have has no model number visible, but seems to be a with a 4Gig Got an Asus Eee 4g Surf about 6 months ago and at first was somewhat disappointed. The small size and the Xandros distro with it's easy Eeebuntu is basically ubuntu with gnome which has been modified to work for the eee PC with little extra configuration.

You can also install a I'm looking at what distribution to install on my new eeepc HA and I'm wondering whether I use " Linux Mint " it is based on ubutu so use the Librepilot for ubuntu works great installs easy I think that LinuxMint would also work well, but don't try to install a Ubuntu was a logical choice since it was already being used for the Ruim twee maanden ligt hier zo'n Asus Eee PC stof te vergaren.

Eerst download je het iso bestand van Ubuntu Eee 8. If you are using Windows, you can simply download the IDE software, install it I tried searching for different Linux Ubuntu distributions, both old and new, All you Ubuntu UNR 9. Since the initial eeePC release, Asus has upped the specs and At some point, the eeePC will just quit working because of this — if you install Windows, Has anyone installed LXLE First things first, I decided to install Lubuntu Eventually, I decided to install an Ubuntu derivative..

Or you can install them to just about Ubuntu Netbook Remix didn't work very well -- very slow with the They came with some version of Ubuntu Netbook Remix that is cluttered …. BrendanS likes this. You must log in or sign up to reply here. Show Ignored Content. Similar Threads - Really cheap upgrade. Dell really voids warranty if OEM partitions are deleted?

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