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Yes. No. Maybe. - Ubuntwo
January 2009
 
 
 
 
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Sat, Aug. 23rd, 2008 01:07 am
Ubuntwo

The evil and fail that was the shattering of the Macbook LCD has... been righted. Not entirely, and that will happen, mind, but at least I have something to work on, now.

For those who wonder to themselves, "How the eff did she let that happen?" (which is probably a few at least, since I was too PO'd to talk much about it at the time), I will tell you: through a moment of utter klutziness and unfortunate timing/placement so unimaginable that I had not in fact imagined it until several hours after the event itself. Early the day of the fail, I leaned over to put something in the trash. My laptop bag shoulder strap had gotten wrapped around one of the casters on my office chair somehow, and this combined with the lean meant my chair toppled (rather painfully for me, I might add). It didn't register at the time that I fell on my laptop bag; no, that didn't hit until a full five minutes after I saw the gigantic maze of cracks all over my lovely LCD.

I immediately googled around to find out how much these things cost to fix, and proceeded to have a heart attack over the many forum posts suggesting that Apple charges about $900 to replace an LCD. Cue several phone calls to Apple, then their local retail store, then a visit: yep. Well, almost. $807. To replace one part of a computer I paid $1000 for. Uhm, no thanks.

(There was also a momentary spark of hope when - and yes, this sounds perverse - Sam got in a car accident which shattered the screen of his laptop, the Macbook Pro for his job. I thought our homeowner's had an annual, not incident, deductible, so Sam's misfortune could have at least meant we got something out of the money we shovel toward our house insurance. And also, P.S. Sam is fine, along with everyone else involved in the accident.)

Anyway, so after reading about replacing your own LCD, I troll around ebay looking for used LCDs. I get sniped three timed, and said EFF THAT.

So I started looking into subnotebooks. Turns out the Sylvania g Netbook was ultra-cheap, and also pretty functional in terms of specs - $299 for a 7-inch 1.2gHz machine with 1gb RAM, 30gb HDD, built-in webcam and card reader, wifi, and so on. It's tiny, light, and I'm perfectly comfortable typing on it.

So I bought one, but the bundled OS (gOS) is ass. (I've joked with Sam that the 'g' stands for 'ghetto-ass lack of standard UNIX commands'.) It was an extra-special pain in the ass getting it fixed and transitioned over to regular (rather than dumbed-down) Ubuntu. (I did have to hand it over to Sam for a ridonkulous bit of trouble trying to get it to boot from USB.)

Aaaaaanyway. Long story short, it's up, running, and Oh, goodness! It's happy. Here's how it's decked out at the moment:



Which is perfectly workable for me.

My short review: lots of complaints on the net about the following:
1. wireless not working right with WEP
2. small keyboard
3. tiiiiiiiiny little touchpad with sensitivity jacked to 11 by default
4. small screen

But I use WPA2 on my wireless network, so I've had no trouble getting my wireless to connect. I've similarly had no trouble typing or reading on the screen. I had some trouble with the touchpad initially, but once I killed down the sensitivity a bit, it works fine. PEOPLE ON THE INTERNET WHAT DO YOU WANT FOR $299 JEEZ.

(And now that I feel like I've channeled Dinosaur Comix, I can sleep. G'night!)

Tags: , , ,
Current Mood: pleased
Current Music: The air conditioner and Sam's CPAP.

6CommentReplyAdd to MemoriesTell a Friend

rafferty
rafferty
Herb
Sat, Aug. 23rd, 2008 06:29 am (UTC)

Cool screenshot.

I hear ya on fixing the Mac. I finally took my iMac in, years (yes that's right! hey, I have way too many computers :P) after it had died from the power supply (or whatever they had problems with) taking a dump on me. It was just a couple months out of coverage/recall on that problem. The guy at the Apple store said they'd do it for free, although the repair printout said over $700. When they finally called to say it was fixed, they were going to charge me that. Um, no, I was told it was going to be free. No way would, or could I spend that much, especially after I got the 17" iMac on sale at CompUSA for about $1000-1200 on sale because it was a return.


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etesla
etesla
Erica Tesla
Sat, Aug. 23rd, 2008 03:26 pm (UTC)

Yeah, mine was a legitimate up-front statement: they wouldn't cover it because LCD damage is almost universally considered accidental.

Ah well. Their loss, my gain. When I'm feeling ebay-friskier, I will get an LCD and fix it myself for the rich old price of $150. Because I can can can.


ReplyThread Parent
rustycoon
rustycoon
Industrial Strength Ideas, Conveniently Packaged
Sat, Aug. 23rd, 2008 11:14 am (UTC)
Wheee!

Horray for you having a lappy again! I wonder if there's a freeciv client for linux...


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etesla
etesla
Erica Tesla
Sat, Aug. 23rd, 2008 03:02 pm (UTC)
Re: Wheee!

There is. :) The screen may not have the real estate for it, but it can't hurt to try. ^^


ReplyThread Parent
simonfunk
simonfunk
Simon Funk
Tue, Sep. 2nd, 2008 11:46 pm (UTC)

Did you take notes on the install? I'd be curious what the tricks were to getting Ubuntu going on it. Did you try a net install? I used to have a fuji P1120 ( http://sifter.org/~simon/journal/20030911.html ) and would like something like that again. Curious how they compare but I guess I'd just have to play w/the g to see. The fuji had a touch screen (finger-operable) which was pretty cool for point-and-go web browsing.


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etesla
etesla
Erica Tesla
Wed, Sep. 3rd, 2008 12:53 am (UTC)

Not many; I had [info]stesla do most of it. Basically, if you google around for instructions on preparing a USB drive to install Ubuntu, you'll find what you need. The tutorials all seem to expect that you have Windows, which was a pain.

As of right now, I have a few misgivings - mainly that I haven't figured out how to get the webcam working with the vanilla install, and that now I can't get TTY right (something wrong with the screen res I think) - but I mainly wanted it as a quick keyboard interface that I could carry with me anywhere, so it's functional.

If you decide to snag one, let me know. I'll toss you whatever help and such I can.


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