Intel® Celeron™ M 360, L2 cache 1 MB, 400 MHz FSB
BIOS
* Phoenix BIOS
* 4 MB Flash ROM
* SMBIOS 2.3 support
* Advanced Configuration and Power Interface 1.0b and 2.0 (ACPI 1.0b and 2.0) support
* Wired for Management 2.0 (WfM 2.0)
512 MB 333 MHz DDR RAM
Memory expansion options
* Two 200-pin industry standard DDR-SODIMM sockets
* Accepts two 333 MHz DDR RAM memory modules in memory bay
* No internal memory
* 2 GB maximum system memory
Graphics controller
Intel® with 32 MB UMA Video Memory (chipset integrated)
* 2D hardware acceleration
* 3D rendering acceleration
Video memory
* 32 MB UMA (shared memory)
LCD maximum refresh rate - 60 Hz
PC2001 compliant AC' 97 audio
Modem features
* Integrated V.92 56K modem
* Uses the RJ-11 jack on the rear of the notebook
* Supports Wake on Ring from S3 power mode
10/100 Mbps Ethernet interface features
* Integrated IEEE 802.3 (10/100 BASE-TX) Ethernet interface
* Uses the RJ-45 jack on the rear of the notebook
* Supports Wake on LAN from S3 power mode
Input/Output (I/O) ports
* Four USB version 2.0 (4-pin)
* IEEE 1394 (4-pin)
* V.92, 56K Modem (RJ-11)
* 10/100 Ethernet (RJ-45)
* External monitor (VGA)
* Stereo headphone output
* Monophonic microphone input
* PC Card socket (one Type II)
* DC input
PCMCIA
* Accepts one Type II device
* Ricoh R5C590 controller
60 GB 2.5 hard drive
Memory card reader (Factory installed option)
Supports the following card types:
* Memory Stick®
* MultiMediaCard™
* Secure Digital™
Battery capacity
6-cell Li-Ion
* 4.4 Ah
* 11.1 V nominal
* 48 Wh
Power management
* Advanced Configuration and Power Interface 1.0b or later (ACPI 1.0b or later) support
* SMBIOS 2.3
* PC 2001 compliant
* CPU may support Intel® Speedstep™ technology
Physical specifications
Dimensions 12.9 × 10.5 × 1.0-inches (W × D × H)
328 × 268 × 27.1-millimeters (W × D × H)
System weight 5.5 pounds (2.5 kilograms)
Includes optical drive and 6-cell battery
AC adapter weight 11.5 ounces (357 grams)
Includes cord
Battery weight 10.4 ounces (322.5 grams)
This laptop works fine with Ubuntu, Gentoo, Vlos, and Xandros. I was able to get all hardware running on all of the above mentioned distros, except for the built-in wireless card, which is winblows only. The built in card is a Broadcom, and there are no Linux drivers available. I was unable to get ndiswrapper working, but apparently others have been successful. Out of the distros mentioned, Xandros was the easiest to set up, but it uses KDE, which I despise, so I switched to Ubuntu. Slightly more difficult to get everything running, but it worked fine.
LinuxQuestions.org is looking for people interested in writing
Editorials, Articles, Reviews, and more. If you'd like to contribute
content, let us know.