I have a little Sony Vaio VGN-T17GP laptop that I use for travelling, I bought it off ebay about a year ago for $1000 specifically to use when we go on holidays, as it only weighs 1.2kg, and it is very small, measuring just 272mm by 205mm. It has a 1.1GHz Pentium M processor, 1GB of RAM, a 40GB hard drive, a DVD burner, Wi-Fi, 2 USB ports, a PCMCIA port, a fire wire port, and the standard modem and Ethernet connections. To top it all off, the battery will last nearly 8 hours in low power mode. But it’s a few years old now, and it’s not the fastest laptop in the world, and so I decided that I would try to install Ubuntu 8.04 on it to speed it up a bit. Although I used to be an expert Unix user in a past life, it’s been years since I’d even looked at a Unix machine, and I’d only ever had limited exposure to Linux, so I’m approaching this installation almost as a newbie.
I did a Google search to see if anyone had done a Linux install onto a Sony Viao laptop like mine, but couldn’t find any references, so I decided to give it a go on my own
Installation
I downloaded the live CD from the Ubuntu website, burnt the .iso image to CD, then put the CD into my laptop and rebooted. Installation was very straight forward. I followed the guided setup to repartition my hard drive to include a Linux boot partition and a swap partition, answered a few other questions such as what country I live in, what sort of keyboard layout I use, what timezone I am in etc, and then the installation began, and in about 30 minutes, I had a fresh installation of Linux on my computer, ready to go! Microsoft take note! Installation does not have to be difficult!
Wireless (Wi-Fi) Networking
First job was to get the Wi-Fi configured to hook into my home network. I run WPA personal security on my home network instead of WPA2 personal because I have 3 access points at home, and one of them doesn’t support WPA2. So, I tried to get it to connect to my network using WPA2 Personal, but it just would not connect. I turned off security on one of my access points and was able to connect right away. I then set that access point to WPA2 Personal security, and was also able to connect straight away, but when I set the access point back to WPA personal, It just refused to connect. I played around with it for a while, and then found that if I manually set the encryption to “TKIP” instead of “Automatic”, it worked just fine!
Muted Audio
Next problem was that I had next to no sound. I couldn’t hear anything over the speakers, and only very very faint sound through the headphones. I did a quick Google search and found this blog post, which described how the default installation leaves a lot of inputs turned on, even if they are not physically present. So I just followed the instructions to turn off the extra unused inputs, and presto, sound worked just fine!
Installing Applications
One thing that deserves a mention is the Synaptic Package Manager, it makes package installation and updates just so simple and straight forward, just brilliant
Installing Google Applications
There are 2 applications from Google that I use every day, and not being able to use them on Linux would be a showstopper for me, but I was not disappointed.
The first app, Picasa2, offered me several methods, and I probably chose the most complex, but also probably the best. All I had to do was follow the instructions to use the Google linux repositories and then install the application through the synaptic package manager
I thought I would be able to install my second Google App, Google Earth, the same way, it I couldn’t find it. Instead, I went to the Google Earth page, pressed the download link, and it must have detected that I was running Linux, because it automatically offered me a file called GoogleEarthLinux.bin. I just saved this to my desktop, opened a terminal session, changed to my desktop directory, and run “sh GoogleEarthLinux.bin”, and it installed Google Earth for me. Brilliant!
Suspend and Hibernate
I found that I could get Suspend to work, but most of the time, I prefer to use Hibernate, but try as I might, I couldn’t not get it to work, seems to be a very common problem. I did some looking around on Google again, and found this blog post about using another application called “uswsusp” to take care of it. I followed the instructions on that page, and I now have hiberbation working as it should!
Things left to do
I just have a couple of things left that I need to get working. The first is to get the AT&T Network Client configured so that I can connect into my work network and read my email. I have got it installed, but I can’t get it to connect. The windows version of the client has a lot more configurable items, some of which must be configured before it will connect, but I haven;t yet found how to configure those items on the Linux version, still working on it
The next thing that I have to do is get my Telstra NextG wireless network card (MF332) working so that I can connect whereever I am. I found a few guides on the net and have tried a few different methods, but have not had any success yet, I will post again when I do
Mate,
Any luck with getting MF332 working on ubuntu?
Paul
No, not yet unfortunately, i haven’t had time to work on it any further, I want to get back to it soon. If you do find out how to get it going in the meantime though, please let me know. Thanks!
Your blog is interesting!
Keep up the good work!
Hi
Can you share how you managed to get AT&T Network Client installed in Linux, I find only Suse and RH versions available in At&T site
Thanks
Saleem
Hi Saleem,
You need to convert the rpm package to a .deb package, but alien doasn’t work, you need to follow the instructions on this site:
http://www.nowhere.dk/archives/2008/01/15/installing_at&t_global_network_client_on_ubuntu/index.php
Next, make sure that you have the right version of TCL installed, version 8.3 will cause problems, but version 8.4 and 8.5 work fine, just use
sudo aptget install tcl8.5
to install the latest version.
Now, reboot, and you should now be able to start the client from the Applications/Internet menu.
If you have problems connecting, then you man need to add a line:
INTERNAL_IP4_DNS=xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
to the top of /opt/agns/bin/ConfigAGN.sh file. Just replace the xxx’s with the IP address of your DNS server.
Fantatsic – Thank you very much for your sharing of this process.
I too have an old T17GP, very robust little machine, I have not ventured into linux or ubuntu ever before but have always wanted to.
I have book marked this page, when time permits I will endeavour to convert.
Please maintain your experience – every little detail helps
Thanks again.
Michael.
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