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Which puppy do you recommend for installation? I will be mostly surfing the web via wifi and watching ripped movies.
Thanks.
Code: Select all
# Boot automatically after 3 second.
timeout=3
title puppeeerc2 on sdb1
root (hd1,0)
kernel /puppeeerc2b1/vmlinuz psubdir=puppeeerc2b1 pfix=fsck
initrd /puppeeerc2b1/initrd.gz
title puppeeerc2 on sda2
root (hd0,1)
kernel /puppeeerc2/vmlinuz psubdir=puppeeerc2 pfix=fsck
initrd /puppeeerc2/initrd.gz
For what you are doing pupeee is most likely the best. For other things I found that there were way too many things about it that didn't work right so I put 431 on. It appears that when they made pupeee they took out a bunch of library files so that some of the pets I wanted to install didn't work. They also are using a different kernel so things written so that they need a specific kernel don't work.r3bol wrote:I have a eeePC 4G (I think it's a 700/701 model) that looks exactly like this...
Which puppy do you recommend for installation? I will be mostly surfing the web via wifi and watching ripped movies.
Thanks.
just had a look and yes it is not so straight forward to do the install i suggested from within xandros. puppeee website has install suggestions. or if you can get puppeee onto a usb stick or sdcard from a comptuer that has a cd, boot from that media, then you can do the install i suggested from within a puppy environment. holding down the Esc key during startup will allow you to boot from external media.r3bol wrote:I'm having some problems with the 4.4rc install.
I don't actually have xandros installed so I couldn't try to install puppeee that way. I also don't have Windows so I can't install 4.4rc with the usb creator (only for windows). My best bet it to get BrowerLinux 366 working correctly i think.aarf wrote:just had a look and yes it is not so straight forward to do the install i suggested from within xandros. puppeee website has install suggestions. or if you can get puppeee onto a usb stick or sdcard from a comptuer that has a cd, boot from that media, then you can do the install i suggested from within a puppy environment. holding down the Esc key during startup will allow you to boot from external media.r3bol wrote:I'm having some problems with the 4.4rc install.
UnetBootin, cant help you never used it.
in that case i thinkr3bol wrote:I don't actually have xandros installed so I couldn't try to install puppeee that way. I also don't have Windows so I can't install 4.4rc with the usb creator (only for windows). My best bet it to get BrowerLinux 366 working correctly i think.aarf wrote:just had a look and yes it is not so straight forward to do the install i suggested from within xandros. puppeee website has install suggestions. or if you can get puppeee onto a usb stick or sdcard from a comptuer that has a cd, boot from that media, then you can do the install i suggested from within a puppy environment. holding down the Esc key during startup will allow you to boot from external media.r3bol wrote:I'm having some problems with the 4.4rc install.
UnetBootin, cant help you never used it.
is the easiest route (if you have another computer, or compliant internet cafe handy. )if you can get puppeee onto a usb stick or sdcard from a comptuer that has a cd, boot from that media, then you can do the install i suggested from within a puppy environment. holding down the Esc key during startup will allow you to boot from external media.
Sorry to hear you had trouble with that. Someone recently gave me an EeePC 900 and I had read thar BL366 was reported to work on it. It worked fine for me once I got a booting USB stick. Good luck.r3bol wrote:Just tried with BrowerLinux 366, but having some problems with what looks like corrupted graphics. You can kind of make out boxes and buttons, but that's about all. Just looking now to see if there is something i can change in the boot options.