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Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $1,500.00 | Rating: 8
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.10-1.741FC3smp
Distribution:
Fedora Core 3
Everything works great save two issues:
- Until you install the nVidia drivers, on some variants (Mandrake in particular) the display has a 1" black border that isn't used.
- The Broadcom 54g Integrated WiFi chip is TOTAL CRAP. The reception is ghastly. The performance lackluster. Not to mention it has absolutely ZERO Linux support. Not even alpha test drivers. NOTHING. So, if you plan on getting this laptop, plan on getting a USB wifi adapter as well.
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $1,500.00 | Rating: 7
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.10-gentoo-r6
Distribution:
Gentoo
Alps touchpad needs a great deal of work, installed .14 drivers for the touch pad and took some time to activate. The psmouse driver must be loaded AFTER usb is activated. Very important. Main problem is the mouse is slow, adjustamnts in gnome mouse panel helped but affected the accuracy.
The broadcom wlan device can be used with ndiswrappers. This allows you to install 32 bit windows drivers. Note: This only works in 32 bit version of Linux.
Issues with sound until I installed 2.6 kernel (ALSA)
I have heard there is no support for the media devices.
Distribution: gentoo, debian, ubuntu live gnome 2.10
Posts: 440
Rep:
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $950.00 | Rating: 4
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.3, 2.6.8
Distribution:
Debian
Actually generally linux-compatible. Broadcom Wireless G is a pian, but works. No linux support for card reader. black boprder problem is actually abug in the nvidia drive that can and has been resolved.
This notebook has it's own linux mailing-list that has fixes and howtos for all but the card reader. Everything else seems to work great.
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $800.00 | Rating: 8
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.11.6
Distribution:
Slamd64 (64 bit port of Slackware 10.1)
I am very impressed with this laptop. I expected a nightmare, and it took less than a day to set up with 64 bit Linux.
I found these two pages invaluable:
http://www1.uop.edu/~khughes/presario-r3120us/
http://cmb.phys.cwru.edu/kisner/linux/compaq-r3000/
They are a little outdated, but the information is still good.
I am using the 64 bit proprietary Nvidia driver. It works, but I have to load, unload, and reload with options the nvidia module to get rid of the black bar previously mentioned. 3D performance is acceptable, and the video overlay works. I don't play games in Linux, but I do play DVDs.
The wireless card works perfectly with ndiswrapper. This was actually one of the easier things to setup. I don't understand the complaints about range. It seems to work well even far away. I used the 64 bit version of the driver. Check for working drivers here: http://ndiswrapper.sourceforge.net/
The touchpad worked for me without drivers, but to get the scrolling to work and to have control over the tapping feature, I had to install drivers found in the first link above.
The powernow feature of the Athlon64 works well with the powernowd daemon. The transition is seemless, and with a 12-cell battery, it will run about 4 hours with light word processing activity.
Power management is the big problem. Suspend to RAM sort of works, but it does not wake up with video, and I cannot make suspend to disk (ie hibernate) work at all. For now, I have to power off when I need to save power and I won't be using it.
The Ethernet port works, but for some reason is detected as eth1, I have no eth0.
I don't know about the card reader, the firewire port, or the PCMCIA port. I have nothing to test these with. Otherwise, everything seems to work very well
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $1,300.00 | Rating: 8
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.11
Distribution:
Gentoo
Great laptop. All the important features are working. I even found a 64bit windows driver for the wireless-adapter. Works with ndiswrapper. Check: http://www.linuxant.com/driverloader/drivers.php
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): None indicated | Rating: 8
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.10-5-386
Distribution:
Ubuntu Hoary
For those having problems using this laptop w/Linux I would suggest install Ubuntu Hoary. A vanilla install via cd will leave you with a completely useable system from the first boot.
Two issues that need to be addressed after install:
1. Built-in wireless will need ndiswrapper installed as:
"apt-get install ndiswrapper"
then simply download and install the windows driver as:
"ndiswrapper -i bcml5a.inf"
You now have a perfectly working 802.11G wireless card, no fuss.
2. If you are going to use OpenGL 3D rendering, the default nvidia drivers that are installed (nv) are not going to cut it. Simply install the nvidia commercial drivers as:
"apt-get install nvidia nvidia-glx nvidia-settings"
Replace "nv" in your xorg.conf with "nvidia" and make any other modifications you need (see the nvidia docs in /usr/share/doc/nvidia)
That's it! From cd insertion to fully functioning it should be less than an hour (includes a 45 minute cd install)
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): $750.00 | Rating: 8
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.16-1.2080_FC5
Distribution:
Fedora Core 5
Under Fedora 5, I have been very pleased with this notebook. Battery life seems good, though I haven't taken it off AC much.
It should be noted that I've had this machine for a while, but haven't been able to get Linux working on it until now. I tried FC2, FC3, SuSE 9.1, SuSE 10, Mandrake 10, Ubuntu 5.10, and a few others. The biggest problem was that I couldn't get the PCMCIA adapter to work. There are guides out there to get them to work, but I could never get it to cooperate. Apparently there are memory allocation problems with some of these machines. Since I don't have the internal wireless adapter, this was a requirement. Apparently this has been resolved though, wireless is now working great.
Since I don't have the widescreen model, I've not run into any video problems, though there is an update to the Nvidia drivers that you need to patch the installer with before it will compile a driver:
I spent quite a while looking for that one :) While I was looking for it, the default 'nv' driver worked just fine, but without hardware acceleration, it choked on GL. This was no suprise.
CPU stepping works well, I'm using a 32-bit processor. Suspend to RAM doesn't work yet, but I haven't played with it either. The NForce modem informs me that it's working with the smartlink driver (slmodem-alsa-2.9.11-1.lvn5), but I don't have a phone line, so I haven't tested it.
This machine uses the Alps touchpad, standard synaptics driver settings issued by Anaconda work very well, once I figured out that gestures are turned on by default. . . couldn't figure out why the hell my browser kept going back.
Sound works fine, autodetected and installed the snd_intel8x0 module. Ethernet also works fine, detects link automaticaly.
All in all, now that I have a distro and kernel that will support the PCMCIA slot, I am very happy with this machine. The addition of NetworkManager is very helpful for wireless on a mobile, once you get working drivers. Fortunatley, I have a card that has native Linux support.
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): None indicated | Rating: 1
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.16-1.2122_FC5-x86_64
Distribution:
Tried Fedora Core 5 and SuSE 10.1
My Compaq R3240US laptop has a buggy triple speed clock. Exact same specs (AMD64 3200+, nForce3, GeForce 440MX 64MB, Broadcom WiFi). No Linux distro works correctly with it and no combination of boot parameters makes any difference. For more info visit: http://www.foo-projects.org/~olivier/r3000/
I'd have to say the hardware is completely incompatible with Linux. 1 out of 10 :o
Distribution: PCLinuxOS 2007 on my laptop and Suse 10.2 on my desktop.
Posts: 341
Rep:
Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid? (in USD): None indicated | Rating: 10
Kernel (uname -r):
2.6.13-15.12-smp
Distribution:
Suse 10.0
I absolutely love this laptop! It came with XP but I now dual boot with Suse 10.0 and use Linux for nearly everything.
Mine has the Broadcom wireless card, ATI 9000IGP (RS300) graphics and these both work fine.
To get wireless working I used ndiswrapper with the windows drivers and this works flawlessly. Graphics too are fine, although they were not brilliant until I realised that I had set my screen resolution incorrectly!
The touchpad mouse worked well, but took some time to configure. Once I'd worked out how to do it, I turned off the 'tap for click' feature and had it move at exactly the speed I wanted.
The sound is great too.
Problem areas:
Suse wouldn't boot up when installed. Turning ACPI=off on the boot option solved this one, but... (read on)
I have solved pretty much everything now EXCEPT power management. I can't boot it with ACPI enabled and have no way of suspending to disc or of monitoring the battery. Maybe I need a better distro?? I'm loving Suse though.
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