On 05/29/2015 10:38 PM, Robert Crawford wrote:

On May 29, 2015 7:04 PM, "John Aten" <welcome.to.eye.o.r...@gmail.com 
<mailto:welcome.to.eye.o.r...@gmail.com>> wrote:
 >
 > Hey all,
 > I would like to see if anyone could give some advice or opinions on getting 
an inexpensive laptop to run Debian. I plan to use the machine for lighter duty 
functions; writing, web browsing, programming, etc. Basically, I am looking for 
something with a little more muscle than a Chromebook. Most laptops that I have 
seen that come with Debian or other distros preinstalled seem to be more expensive 
than I would like, so that of course leaves me installing it myself. I have 
researched this, and can never seem to find solid information on the laptops that 
are currently available; the information is usually a little dated.
 > I have some experience setting up Debian and other distros, but if there are 
problems with hardware configuration, I get out into the deep end fast. I would 
like to avoid any problems that are beyond the reach of my very modest skills.
 > I see that Dell offers the Inspiron 14 or 15 3000 series non-touch laptop 
with Ubuntu preinstalled; this model is around the price/spec range that I would 
like. I figure, if it runs Ubuntu, then this is possibly a good indication that I 
could install Debian; I was wondering first, if that is a good assumption, and 
also if anyone has had any experience with installing Debian on this particular 
model. (I have an older Inspiron, on which I have had good luck installing several 
different distros, including Debian, but I don't know that this really indicates 
anything either.) Second, aside from this particular model, if anyone has 
recommendations on any other laptops in that price/spec range?
 > I'd appreciate any help and opinions.
 >
 > Thanks,
 >
 > J

John,

I just bought a Dell Latitude D810, I installed 80gb ide hard drive. It came 
with 512mb ram. I've install a 512 module until my other ram comes in.  I 2gb 
ordered (total 768mb). I installed Xubuntu 14.04.1 on it. It has a single core 
CPU.  Ethernet and WiFi works. I got everything from EBay. This was a low cost 
laptop. I'm very happy with it.

If you want dual core & sata hd, look for a latitude D820-D830 series.

Robert

I

If you buy a Dell with Windows 7 installed on it, you'd better try and use 
Windows to shrink the partition and make room for Linux. I have a Latitude 
E6510, and I used GParted. Windows or Dell, one or the other, didn't like
that, and I had trouble with an installation of PCLOS. I wound up with a small 
partition directly after Windows with a tiny piece of Linux on it, which is 
otherwise useless, and the real Linux os installed after that partition.
Without that partition, Linux won't play. Actually, that partition started out 
as a large useless partition, but it turned out OK to shrink it down to almost 
nothing, but not eliminate it. Screwy, but true.

I would guess (remember I said *guess*) that if you wipe Windows altogether and 
format the whole drive with ext4 you won't have that problem.

--doug


--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: https://lists.debian.org/5569306f.1060...@optonline.net

Reply via email to