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?
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: 2008-04-05 06:07 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-06 02:53 pm (UTC)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. :)
(no subject)
Date: 2008-04-06 07:16 pm (UTC)