Eee!

Apr. 3rd, 2008 09:43 pm
ellarien: two laptops (computers2)
[personal profile] ellarien
After seeing an Eee in action at last week's meeting, and in view of a couple of upcoming trips where it might be an advantage not to have to lug even the relatively small Dell laptop, I gave in and got my own -- a black 4G Surf. The keyboard turns out to be even smaller than the folding one I use with the Palm, but usable, and the screen is nice and crisp, with good viewing angles. Thanks to these clever folks, I found the console and unlocked the hidden real-computer functionality, which turns out to include Thunderbird! I may try for some of my other favorite applications at the weekend.

So far, I'm having a little trouble with the wireless networking. It seems to forget the key for my home network every time I reboot, and it also seems to be having a slightly disruptive effect on my happy little home network: it sees shared files the other machines, but can only actually access the ones on the Vista machine which has password-protected shares; on the others it gets into an endless loop of prompting for a non-existent password. And now the Behemoth laptop has decided it can't see the local workgroup at all, which hasn't happened since I got the desktop settled in. Maybe I just need a better router, or maybe it just got confused because I messed up typing the password the first time. (Or it could be a side-effect of Vista SP1, I suppose.)

OpenOffice seems to be a little overfaced by my eighty-odd-thousand-word novel file, and refuses to give me a wordcount.

Otherwise, I haven't found any major roadblocks yet.

I'm a little bemused by the bit in the manual that talks about the heads on the solid state drive being retracted at power-off to avoid scratching the surface. Am I wrong about the whole point of solid state drives, or is that a bit of careless copy-pasting from the manual for a different machine?

(no subject)

Date: 2008-04-04 03:52 pm (UTC)
ext_12726: (Default)
From: [identity profile] heleninwales.livejournal.com
Thanks for the link. I haven't actually done anything with my Eee yet other than use it as a word processor or to access the Net when I'm sitting relaxing in front of the telly. As we have a wired network rather than wireless, I haven't noticed the network problems you've had, though I haven't yet persuaded it to see any of the other computers, perhaps because we're still on XP or Windows 98?

(no subject)

Date: 2008-04-05 01:11 pm (UTC)
ext_12726: (Asus Eee)
From: [identity profile] heleninwales.livejournal.com
As I've now decided that the Eee is going to cut it as a second computer, I've officially retired my aged laptop, which gets rid of one Win98 machine from the system.

Actually the worst culprit is my husband's XP computer which has a very tenuous grasp on the network and has to be constantly reminded that it can and should be talking to the other computers. :)

(no subject)

Date: 2008-04-06 02:53 pm (UTC)
ext_12726: (Asus Eee)
From: [identity profile] heleninwales.livejournal.com
All the computers are in the same workgroup, though for some reasons G's XP machine can lose its settings. Basically I think it's always been slightly dodgy as it now won't recognise the USB ports.

Re the Eee and networks, the trick does seem to be leaving them for a bit to get acquainted. Thanks for suggesting it. After using it for a while, when I looked last night, the Eee could see the shared folder on my Desktop machine. So that seems to be OK then, should I ever need that facility. :)

Mission Statement

Reading, writing, plant photography, and the small details of my life, with digressions into science and computing.

Profile

Ellarien

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags