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Re: issues with HP dv5000 laptop

From: cga2000 <cga2000(at)gmail.com>
Date: Tue Jan 22 2008 - 19:52:27 EST


On Tue, Jan 22, 2008 at 01:40:44PM EST, Preston Boyington wrote:
> cga2000 wrote:
> >On Tue, Jan 15, 2008 at 02:25:38PM EST, Florian Kulzer wrote:
> >
> >[..]
> >
> >I do realize that the above is likely offered more as a workaround than
> >a solution, but ..
> <snipped>
>
> After several installs and attempts to correct this issue I have finally
> installed "stable" and upgraded everything BUT "x" related
> fonts/servers/etc to "testing". Currently everything is working like it
> should graphically, but this is an awful way to get around this problem.

What's "awful" is the situation you ran into before you found this very practical workaround. I did run into a bunch of issues when I went from sarge to etch but nothing like what you described in your earlier post.

Personally, I don't believe in .. "apt-get upgrade" .. I do a net install of the new release on separate partitions .. patiently migrate my stuff .. and switch when and ONLY when I know for sure that everything that matters actually works.

Heck, likely I'm not the sharpest knife in the drawer .. but last time it took me over a year to get my internet connection to work on the new system.

:-(

The good thing is that while this "upgrade" method can be a little time-consuming .. the tradeoff is that I get to know my system a lot better.

:-)

> I have placed a screenshot on my site that shows this:
>
> http://prestonboyington.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/badxonhplaptopscreenshot.png

Do you need help?X

Unless your religion forbids, you may want to install quality screen fonts such as Microsoft's Verdana .. Tahoma .. et al for a nicer cleaner look.

As much as I dislike anything M$ .. nothing beats the top quality fonts that money bought.

I'm a very occasional user of Microsoft products but from the little I have seen this is the ONLY thing M$ did better than everybody else.

> (the screenshot is of an Ubuntu screen, but Debian does the same)
>
> Also, how can I tell what modules are being used for the internal
> wireless. The Ubuntu disk I used properly configured the wireless
> PCMCIA card and the internal wireless so I want to see what it used.
> Debian will eventually show you that there are wireless networks
> available (using the PCMCIA card), but you can't connect to any of them.
> Given that stable and testing both enabled the card during the
> install, I find it strange that it doesn't work after reboot. I figure
> its just a module that I haven't loaded.

Mine was a plain old wired NIC and getting it to work was what took me a year .. see above. And yes.. as it turned out, it was my fault .. if I had read the doc, all the doc and nothing but .. I might have found the solution in a matter of hours/days. But as a dilettante user I never imagined in the first place that what worked with "sarge" out-of-the-box would not work likewise with "etch" .. fonts or nic's .. do we see a pattern here ..?

cf. debian bug 352758 for details.

> Thanks everyone.

Well thanks to _you_ for bringing up this font issue. I hope you find the time and motivation to figure out a "real" solution to your/our problem .. and the time to report and document accordingly.

Do you need more help?X

cga

PS. Folks, please note, this is not debian-bashing .. no way!

:-)

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Received on Tue Jan 22 19:53:19 2008

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