Would you recommend the product? yes | Price you paid?: $1,200.00 | Rating: 5
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Kernel (uname -r):
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2.6.11.7-AMD64
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Distribution:
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Fedora Core 3
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The Averatec 6240 is a AMD64 laptop that shows a lot of promise for Linux.<p>
I downloaded the 64-bit version of the FC3 Distro and installed that without a problem. Then I downloaded the latest kernel and compiled that with the AMD64 option and that went OK.<p>
I had to find the driver for the internal wireless card and install that, and that works like a charm under Linux. Indeed, it seems to work better than it does under Windows XP (I set up the laptop to dual-boot), because under Windoze the carrier keeps droping out and reconnecting. Under Linux, the Wi-Fi connection stays connected.<p>
My biggest complaint is the lack of a driver *that works* for the SiS M760 chipset for the display. I am currently running using a VESA display driver giving me 1024x768, not the 1280x800 that I *should* be getting. Whenever I try to get the SiS driver running, I get a "fireworks" display on the laptop, probably due to an incorrect dot-clock setting or some such.<p>
Another complaint -- this not having to due with the laptop itself, but PHP -- there is no 64-bit version of PHP ready for prime-time. It is possible to compile PHP for 64 bits, but alas there are *many* places in the config files that are hard-coded for "lib" directories which needs to be converted to "lib64". I spent half a day trying to find all the places and I still don't get a clean compile. I suppose I could eventually if I had more time to spend mucking about with it, but I think I'll just compile a 32-bit version of Apache and PHP instead. Annoying since Apache and Perl compiles cleanly for 64-bits. Why can't PHP do the same?<p>
So, while I love this laptop, there are quite a few cavets to consider for Linux hacks. If you actually have the time to hack it, go for it. Alas, I actually have to make money on this stuff, so I can't afford the time.
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