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View Full Version : Playing with Walmart's Linspired laptop


Big Booger
April 19th, 2005, 12:11 PM
My wife and daughter recently ordered for me Walmart's $500 Bal^nce laptop computer, which comes equipped with a Linspire operating system. I had some fun putting both the hardware and software through their paces.

Upon receiving the laptop, I immediately fired it up and tried it out. The Linspire system worked pretty well, but of course there were some missing programs. I connected to Linspire's Click N Run software service and tried to register my free 45-day CNR account. CNR may be useful and easy to use, but registering to use it caused me confusion and a feeling of stupidity. After several attempts and failure, I gave up. I probably could have gotten it done, but it was sure a lot of stress for something that I would probably not like. Besides, you don't have to register to use apt-get.

Rather than mess up the installed operating system, I installed a spare hard drive (easily done on Bal^nce), grabbed a SimplyMepis CD, and installed it to the laptop. 55 minutes later, it was working with all functions. I was able to add programs with apt-get immediately.

I loaded Wine, and installed EchoLink, a ham radio program for Windows, in just under 6 minutes. Everything just worked. I did have problems at first using my NetGear MA111 USB wireless device. Eventually it started, and now works flawlessly. I have no clue as to why it didn't work initially.

The laptop uses a 1G VIA CPU and comes with 128MB of RAM. Increasing the amount of memory might add to the performance, but it runs pretty well now.

The Bal^nce laptop seems to be of adequate quality, although the touchpad mouse is totally non-intuitive. (Is touchpad the only reasonable option for laptops?) Incidentally, I tried booting Knoppix 3.7 LiveCD on the laptop and it did not find the touchpad.

Do I recommend the Bal^nce? You bet. Do I recommend Linspire? I would suggest that a newbie might better answer that question, but I find SimplyMepis much more responsive to my needs. And it was easy to install on the Bal^nce laptop.

Jerry Sharp is an old retired telephone technician with too many Linux opinions.

http://hardware.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=05/04/12/1355208&from=rss
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Very interesting article. Quite a bargain and what is more it's based on Linux. Of course I think, the writer of the article is based in Linux and has a good background in Linux. That said, it sounds like a steal of a laptop.. especially for an entry level system.

cash_site
April 22nd, 2005, 00:22 AM
Whoa... I almost thought it was written by you BB, wife and Daughter... (since when did BB have a child??)... Then i saw your comments at end...

I think Linspire is well on its way to making a more user friendly, linux based OS... it will be a real competitor to M$ soon enough, I think it is still in early adopter phase...

The article did highlight some nagging issues, driver problems for some proprierity hardware etc, but good review nonetheless.

bhxtyrant
April 22nd, 2005, 01:10 AM
I agree,I have used Linspire 4.5 on one of my systems and its a very nice O/S.I installed it in my athlon XP1800+ system and everything just worked.I was quite amazed.

Installation was easy,all hardware including my home network was detected with no configuration needed.It took a little getting used to but it was very much like windows O/S with the exception its significantly faster.I guess it takes up less system resources compareed to windows.

If it wasnt for the lack of support as far as programs i use and games i would stick with it.Until those days i still prefer XP over Linspire.