Kazriko Rugxungo ([info]kazriko) wrote,
@ 2009-04-18 01:15:00
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Current mood: cheerful
Entry tags:asus eee 901, computers, geeking out, technology, thinkpad 510c, thinkpad 755ce, ubuntu

Back on a portable computer again.
Back when I was still in high school, I lusted after a particular subnotebook computer that had just come onto the market. It had a 486BL2-50 processor, a 7.7 inch screen at 640x480, 200 Megabyte hard drive, and 4 megs of ram. $1800. It was a mere 10.1"x7.2"x1.7" and only 4 pounds back in 1994. Needless to say, I never managed to buy that system, but as a graduation present my parents bought me a $800 Thinkpad 755CE.

I loved that system, and especially enjoyed the TV card that I bought for it. In the time before PSone's came out with their little LCD screen, that was the best way to play console games. It ran OS/2 Warp 3.0 perfectly and I used it for the first 2 years I was in college. After that, I pretty much abandoned PC compatible systems as my portable units. I used Palm Pilot Pro's, Palm 3, Palm 3C, Tapwave Zodiac, and Garmin Ique3600, and even had a keyboard that worked with some of those systems.

I'm back to a PC compatible portable unit now though, and this one is even better than the 510c. This one is 8.9"x6.9"x1.5" (1.2"x0.3"x0.2" smaller than the 510C and even smaller than the P2000 at work), it has a 1024x600 screen, a full pound and a half lighter than the 510C, and the screen is significantly larger. 100x the storage capacity, a processor that is at least 320x as fast, and 256x as much memory... and this one clocked in at only $280!

Asus EEE 901, I've already replaced the OS with a version of Ubuntu and it's just a great system. Having this smaller unit though makes me realize that my goals with the 510C were unrealistic though. I doubt it would have ever fit in my inside coat pocket... I may need to build a custom coat pocket just for this unit though.

Trying to install Windows 2000 off a USB drive is a thorn in my side though. I suspect I'll just need to fork out the $70 for a USB cd drive... (Cutting it short here at 5 paragraphs for STRedwolf's benefit. ;)




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[info]strredwolf
2009-04-19 01:59 am UTC (link)
A LJ-cut works better, hon. :) Keep going under one.

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[info]kazriko
2009-04-19 06:51 am UTC (link)
Actually, I was done. But I did combine all my little 2-3 sentence paragraphs into 5 longer ones. :)

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[info]kazriko
2009-04-19 06:57 am UTC (link)
(Besides, I actually hate LJ-Cuts. If something is important enough to say, it's important enough to say on the first page. If it's not that important, why am I writing it at all? Paraphrasing Pi, most people aren't going to be arsed to look at the second page anyway. Too much work.

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[info]bibliophage
2009-04-20 03:25 am UTC (link)
There's a utility called liveusb for Ubuntu/Kubuntu/Debian that images an ISO to a flash drive.

So, just make an ISO image of your Windows 2000 or XP CD, then liveusb to the flash drive - it'll take a while, it's a slow process.

Then you'll have a bootable ISO flash drive. (you have to loopback mount the iso image before you can start the flash process)

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[info]kazriko
2009-04-20 04:06 am UTC (link)
Have you done this before? When I try to use that routine it says that "this is not a desktop install cd, and thus cannot be used by this application" and the description implies that it's only for Ubuntu install cds...

I've been able to get W2K/WXP's bootloader onto a USB drive, but I can't seem to get their setup going... I've found all kinds of tools for loading all varieties of linux from a USB drive, but haven't found a credible and working walkthrough on doing the same thing for windows.

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[info]bibliophage
2009-04-20 04:38 am UTC (link)
I haven't used it for 2k/xp, but I _have_ used it for non-linux ISO images.

As far as I know, liveusb didn't care what kind of cd it was.

I'll do more checking, if you'd like

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[info]bibliophage
2009-04-20 04:39 am UTC (link)
http://www.eeeguides.com/2007/11/installing-windows-xp-from-usb-thumb.html

That'll probably help more.

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[info]kazriko
2009-04-20 05:14 am UTC (link)
Thanks for the link, I've bookmarked it and will come back to it if I have time. I actually ordered the CD drive already though, so it may be mostly academic at this point, but I can see it helping if I ever need to make USB installs for any other reason.

It appears that the task is much easier with Windows Vista than with 2k and XP. No special software required. (I've been avoiding methods that required downloading windows executables...)

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