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{{From|https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AspireOne}}
 
{{From|https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AspireOne}}
 
{{Languages|UbuntuHelp:AspireOne}}
 
{{Languages|UbuntuHelp:AspireOne}}
<<Include(/Header)>>
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== About this guide ==
Note: In an effort to clean up this page, the information in this guide has been re-organized, and sectioned (and in some cases corrected) in a style similar to the [[UbuntuHelp:EeePC|EeePC]]'s documentation. If interested, please see [[UbuntuHelp:AA1|AA1]]. - [[UbuntuHelp:dsm-iv-tr|dsm-iv-tr]]
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There are many netbooks under the name "Acer Aspire One".
''I've started a [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/Home|new home page]] -- what do you think?''  [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:pb--ubuntu-wiki|LaunchpadHome:pb--ubuntu-wiki]]
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Each component is shared by some of them but in general they are different.
See Model pages for [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/AOD250|AOD250 (U9.04/U9.10)]], [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne110L|110L (U8.10/U9.04)]], [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/AO751h|AO751h (1366x768 X)]] and [[UbuntuHelp:AA1|AA1 (U8.10)]], and one for [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOneDiscussion|Discussion]]. 
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The subpages of specific models account for this:
=== Note on using this guide ===
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* [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/AOD250|Aspire One D250]] (9.04 and 9.10)
This guide was written with Ubuntu in mind.  Generally everything works the same with the other Ubuntu variants of (e.g., Kubuntu, Xubuntu).  This guide assumes you will use use gedit as your text editor.  You may also substitute the text editor of your choice (e.g., kate for Kubuntu, mousepad for Xubuntu or just use vim/emacs/nano).
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* [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/110L  |Aspire One 110L]] (8.10 and 9.04)  
'''Note''': The default font size used by Xubuntu is in many cases unsuitable for the small screen. Already during the installation windows can be bigger than the screen and the OK button is invisible. The font size can be changed at Applications --> Settings --> Settings Manager --> Font. Size 7 solved most problems. The change can be done already when running the [[UbuntuHelp:LiveCD|LiveCD]] before the installation in order to be able to see the installation windows correctly. It needs to be repeated once after the installation to become permanent.
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* [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/AO751h|Aspire One 751h]] (e.g. how to get 1366x768 pixels)
== Installs old (8.04 and 8.10) and new (9.10) ==
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* [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/D150  |Aspire One D150]] (Ubuntu 10.04)
* [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/Ubuntu9.10|9.10]]
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Nevertheless, fixes, enhancements, and solutions for another model may work for your netbook, specially when:
* [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/Ubuntu8.10|8.10]] (install and upgrade from 8.0.4)
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* The issue is not considered at the subpage specific for your model;
* [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/Ubuntu8.04|8.04]]
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* The subpage specific for your model is outdated (pages get outdated soon as new releases come);
<<Anchor(Ubuntu9.04)>>
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* There is no subpage specific for your model.
== Notes on Ubuntu 9.04 (Jaunty Jackalope) desktop and UNR (Netbook Remix) ==
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== Warning about outdated pages ==
Status: (based on a clean install from a Live boot)
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The following functionalities improve considerably between two Ubuntu releases:
* Install (once all the info had been supplied) to a HDD took 17 minutes using a Optiarc AD-5540A USB DVD drive for desktop and 11 minutes using a 2GB integral USB memory stick (or 7-10 with a 4GB memory stick) for UNR.
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Wireless, Audio, Webcam, Video, Fan control, USB, Sleep, Hibernation.
* UNR boot time (from grub load to Internet connected) on a HDD can be from 40 to 50 seconds.
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They are likely to be outdated in some of the subpages. In most cases they describe manual fixes that are not necessarily with the latest release.
* Sound, touchpad and [[UbuntuWiki:KernelTeam/SuspendResumeTesting/Feedback|suspend/resume]] still work.
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== More material ==
* pciehp module still missing. All USB ports are hot-pluggable, RH SD works if card is present on boot. LH SD slot has been reported to be hot-pluggable but on some AaO's it is not. As workaround add "<code><nowiki>pciehp.pciehp_force=1</nowiki></code>" to defoptions in /boot/grub/menu.lst or to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT in /etc/default/grub if you are already using grub2.
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A previous version of this guide can be found at the [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/Old|Old]] subpage.
* The ath5k !WiFi driver works. No need to "<code><nowiki>modprobe -r ath5k acer_wmi; modprobe ath5k</nowiki></code>".
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It contains mostly outdated data, but can provide useful information, and references.
* Notes for Acer Aspire One 7G5:
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[[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/Ubuntu8.04|Ubuntu8.04]] contains many tweaks that are likely to work for later releases:
* Mine has an Atheros AR5006EG 802.11 b/g chipset.
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Font tweaks; SSD Performance; Reduce SSD Wear; Speed up Firefox; Touchpad tweaks; Optimize screen use; Disable Scrollkeeper; Powersaving. These could be recycled and ported to a subpage.
* This works with Jaunty UNR on a default install, but the wireless chipset is turned off.
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Some are deprecated: Screen tweaks (already works out-of-the-box).
* Open a console and edit <code><nowiki>/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf</nowiki></code> using a text editor (like vi).
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[[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/Ubuntu9.10|Ubuntu9.10]] contains a brief summary of Ubuntu 9.10 tests with several models: 110L, ZG8, 510, ZG5, P531h, 532h, A150, D150.
* Add one line <code><nowiki>blacklist acer_wmi</nowiki></code>
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=== Test results ===
* Save and exit that.
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[[UbuntuWiki:Testing/Laptop/Reports/|Laptop|testing team]]
* Aside: Make '''sure''' that you '''do not''' enable the mad wi-fi drivers in the system settings. If you have, go there and disable them.
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* Reboot.
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* Use the network applet (top right icon next to battery) to enter your wireless details.
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* '''REPORT BACK - Sept 2009'''
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* I am not really happy, the wireless signal is too weak and does not stay connected (when you are at a distance) like the default settings under Linpus lite (whatever those were).
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* Suspend-resume - the wifi network does connect. Good.
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* Connection - the wifi stays connected for hours and hours, even under heavy load (like streaming a video over ssh). Good.
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* Distance from AP - take the netbook to another room and the signal drops like a stone. You get disconnects and stuff goes wrong. BAD.
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* On [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/AO751h|Aspire One 751h]], the default driver works. Enabling the ath5k driver under 'System --> Administration --> Hardware Drivers' breaks it. Be sure to keep it disabled.
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* On [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/AO751h|Aspire One 751h]], it looses wifi connection at an undefined time and wont reconnect. Seems to be only affected by encrypted networks. So far the only solution is a reboot. (this is talked about on the discussion page it maybe overheating due to blocked vents sitting on soft surfaces such as carpet)(I have 4 Aspire One's that sits on a hard table, so it either overheating by itself or its another cause)
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* I have a AOA 150 and had to add blacklist acer_wmi to /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist for my wifi to work
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Load '''linux-backports-modules-jaunty''' to get the LED to work.
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* 3G dongle works (Orange- Option 225)
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* Front microphone works out-of-the-box. If it fails, check '''System->Preferences->Sound->Sound Capture''' is set to "'''HDA Intel ALC268 Analog(ALSA)'''" not "'''ALSA'''". Note that the mic might stop working if you changed the values of Capture in alsamixer or gnome's volume applet. The reason is you need to have the capture volumes unlinked at all times, and the first channel's volume set to what you want, with the 2nd volume bar set to 0.
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* Comment - BodhiZazen - Hats off the the UNR team, but be warned, the UNR remix is slow an almost usable on an [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne/AO751h|AspireOne 751h]] (11.6"). Better to perform a standard install on this hardware.
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* You can adjust the brightness level of the screen as soon as the machine is switched on (using Fn+<left_arrow> or Fn+<right_arrow>), however, if you do this, by the time the login box appears, you will find that the keyboard will not respond to input. Unfortunately, the only solution appears to be to power the machine off and on again (This issue may only apply to the D250?)
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* If the acerhdf module is loaded the gnome sensor applet can be used to show the CPU temperature. To make it work the multiplicator for the thermal zone temp1 is set to 1000 in the properties of this program, though: For some reasons libsensors seems to think that the temperature is returned in kilo-degrees.
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=== AspireOne D250 Microphone Issue ===
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Microphone doesn't work out of the box. Download alsa-driver-1.0.20 from www.alsa-project.org and compile it with ./configure --with-cards=all (initially microphone in the mixer is muted!) In mixer settings input source should be set to "Mic" (default), not "Front Mic". Still sound subsystem doesn't survive suspend-resume. Ethernet card also doesn't work out of the box for D250. Download AR813X-linux-v1.0.0.8.tar.gz from http://partner.atheros.com/Drivers.aspx and install it manually. Ignore gzip warnings about "trailing garbage".
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* Webcam working with cheese (slow video), cameramonitor, luvcview and Skype (but X server crashes if Dual Head).
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* Ext4 works out-of-the-box.
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* Fn-Hotkeys seem ok. (brightness adjustable but visual feedback not 100% correct - some delays)
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Sound and keyboard short-cuts work.
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* The home button (next to 'Fn' and 'Alt') can be configured to act as view desktop via '''Preferences->Keyboard Shortcuts'''.
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* Related bugs:
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* [https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/jaunty/+source/ubiquity/+bug/325958 LiveCD install screen (ubiquity) larger than the default 1024x600px resolution]. To display the parts of the install window that are not visible, hold down ALT while clicking anywhere in the window. 
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* ''Fixed'': [https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/350352 no wlan with Acer Aspire One 110L and not activatable]
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* [https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+bug/342096 SD Card containing /home corrupted on resume]
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One issue is that the automatic partitioner only allocated 384 swap so [https://launchpad.net/~blackest-knight I]'m reinstalling using manual partitioning (may be faster than resizing) finished up with 6.5gb / and 1.6 Swap.  
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=== To Fix Choppy Video Playback With Intel Video ===
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<ol><li>Pass '''enable_mtrr_cleanup mtrr_spare_reg_nr=1''' to kernel in /boot/grub/menu.lst. (Explanation of problem at: [http://perens.com/blog/2009/01/31/13/]). (Explanation of solution at: [https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/370552])
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</li><li>Determine video memory register and assign to mtrr. Explanation at: [https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/314928]. More detailed explanation at step 4 and 5 of [http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1130582 This guide].
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</li><li>Make fix load automatically at each XSession startup. Explanation at: [http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=7078262&postcount=35]<<BR>></li></ol>
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Alternately create your fix file as root somewhere safe: sudo gedit /usr/local/bin/fixmtrr
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<code><nowiki>#!/bin/bash</nowiki></code><<BR>>
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<code><nowiki>if ! `cat /proc/mtrr | grep -q "write-combining"` ; then</nowiki></code><<BR>>
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<code><nowiki>echo "base=0x</nowiki></code>'''yourbase'''<code><nowiki> size=0x</nowiki></code>'''yoursize'''<code><nowiki> type=write-combining" > /proc/mtrr</nowiki></code>
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<code><nowiki>fi</nowiki></code>
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Set execute permissions on the file
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sudo chmod a+x /usr/local/bin/fixmtrr
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Set sudoers access using sudo visudo - (following goes at the end of the file):
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'''yourusername''' ALL=NOPASSWD: /usr/local/bin/fixmtrr
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Place the autorun command in the System/Preference/Startup Applications dialog (or Sessions on earlier Ubuntu's):
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sudo /usr/local/bin/fixmtrr
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<ol><li>*Optional* You can get latest version of Intel driver (v. 2.7.0) by adding the following ppa to your sources: '''deb http://ppa.launchpad.net/glasen/ppa/ubuntu jaunty main''' [Edit: The more recent and complete updates might be available here: https://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-x-swat/+archive/x-updates/]</li></ol>
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=== To get Hibernate working (using TuxOnIce) ===
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<ol><li>Make sure that you have a swap partition set up (it doesn't have to be as big as 2xRAM)
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</li><li>Add the TuxOnIce PPA repositories (and don't forget to add the auth key), which you can find here: [https://launchpad.net/~tuxonice/+archive/ppa]
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</li><li>Follow the instructions here: [http://lists.tuxonice.net/lurker/message/20090409.181125.d20e0bbe.en.html]</li></ol>
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After that hibernate should work correctly!
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[EDIT- Some have reported that Ubuntu Jaunty will hibernate out-of-the-box without this modification. Make sure your swap partition is larger than your RAM.]
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=== Note about touchpad in a newely-installed 9.04: ===
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After making a fresh-install of current development version of 9.04 on 3 Mar 2009 on AspireOne model:ZG5, touchpad did not work. The fix is easy: install xserver-xorg-input-all package with the help of an external USB mouse, if it is needed.
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Try first Fn-F7.
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<<Anchor(References)>>
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== References ==
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* [[UbuntuWiki:LaptopTestingTeam/AcerAspireOneA150|Laptop|testing team]]
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=== Discussion ===
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Discussion of this process is happening [http://www.aspireoneuser.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=164&st=0&sk=t&sd=a here].
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You can also join IRC channel #onelinux on irc.freenode.net.
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=== Other distributions ===
 
=== Other distributions ===
 
Several other distributions have their own installation guides for the Aspire One.
 
Several other distributions have their own installation guides for the Aspire One.
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* [http://wiki.debian.org/DebianAcerOne Debian]
 
* [http://wiki.debian.org/DebianAcerOne Debian]
 
* [http://gentoo-wiki.com/Acer_Aspire_One_A110L Gentoo]
 
* [http://gentoo-wiki.com/Acer_Aspire_One_A110L Gentoo]
<<Anchor(Suggestions)>>
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See also the [http://kmuto.jp/debian/hcl/ Debian device driver check page].
== Suggestions for this guide ==
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Please use @``SIG@ to sign your suggestions.
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=== Use Unetbootin ===
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On this website: [http://tombuntu.com/index.php/2008/08/27/create-a-bootable-usb-drive-or-memory-card/ Create a bootable USB Drive or Memory Card], the tool used was [http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/ UNetbootin] which seems to only require the one computer to run it on (as a statically linked binary, no install required, minimal dependencies) and generically works for a large number of distributions in addition to ubuntu and handles custom diskimages and custom kernels. This seems like a tool that is a little more quick than UbuntuLiveUSB.
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To install:
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* download .bin file from sourceforge
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* right click on file, check executable (or run chmod +x *.bin in terminal)
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* sudo apt-get install mtools p7zip-full
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* run file (double click or type ./unetbooin-linux-282 in terminal) on any linux system
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* select diskimage or distribution
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* select USB drive from list (uses only device names unfortunately)
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* click ok
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Note: UNetbootin is now available in the repositories and can be installed using a package manager.
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Flash drive or memory card will be formatted and set up as a bootable drive.
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=== Stop hard drive death click ===
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Both Hardy and intrepid may suffer from excessive load cycling
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http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=805570
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This will fix the issue, but value 128 in script should be modified to 200.
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interestingly fedora suffers the same issue and they decided on no head parking(not a great idea) and also "S 120"
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has anyone an view on using
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'''''Warning:''''' Please do not run these commands if you do not know what they do, how to monitor your hard drive, and how to reverse them. These commands can cause your hard drive to over heat, and thus you will want to reverse them. In addition these commands probably are not relevant to more recent versions of Ubuntu (read the link to the forums post and the links in that post as well). '''Rebooting resets these settings to the default values.'''''
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Settings for running on ac power:
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<pre><nowiki>
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      /sbin/hdparm -B 254 -S 120 /dev/sda
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</nowiki></pre>
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Settings for running on battery power
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<pre><nowiki>
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      /sbin/hdparm -B 200 -S 120 /dev/sda
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</nowiki></pre>
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There are scripts posted on the forums which semi-automate these settings.
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=== Clean-up ===
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It would be nice to have a single section for Intrepid, rather than several sections that refer to bugs/hiccups that were in previous beta versions but are now irrelevant -- [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:khaeru|LaunchpadHome:khaeru]] <<DateTime(2008-10-16T06:04:27Z)>>
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We should copy the organization [[UbuntuHelp:EeePC|EeePC]] guys uysed on the Wiki.
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-- [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:dudus|LaunchpadHome:dudus]] <<DateTime(2008-12-16T04:43:47Z)>>
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=== Horizontal Scrolling ===
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To enable horizontal scrolling for the touchpad (as in Linpus install), put this in xorg.conf:
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<pre><nowiki>
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Section "InputDevice"
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Identifier  "Mouse0"
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Driver      "synaptics"
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Option     "Protocol" "auto"
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Option     "Device" "/dev/input/mouse0"
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Option     "ZAxisMapping" "4 5 6 7"
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Option      "CorePointer"
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Option      "HorizEdgeScroll" "1"
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EndSection
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</nowiki></pre>
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Tested in Intrepid only.
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-- [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:julie-ubuntu|LaunchpadHome:julie-ubuntu]] <<DateTime(2008-10-23T00:33:39Z)>>
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There is a simpler option: go to System->Preferences->Mouse->Touchpad and choose the options you prefer.
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=== Wireless Broken in Intrepid RC; how to install /home to an SD card ===
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Two things:
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1) Some reports  that the latest Intrepid / updating from an Intrepid beta breaks wireless.
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'''Note''': The driver "ath5k" has been removed from the stock Intrepid kernel, because it's not working reliably on some machines. It works, however, on the AAo, you can easily get it by installing "linux-backports-modules-intrepid" [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:christian-paratschek|LaunchpadHome:christian-paratschek]]
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* Be sure to ''install the backports package first if you rely on the wireless card'', before you do a system update. You may also have to disable competing drivers in the Restricted Drivers manager after rebooting. -- [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:dsm-iv-tr|LaunchpadHome:dsm-iv-tr]]
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Active thread discussing this
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http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=894852&highlight=aspireone+intrepid
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2) The SD card / slot shows up as a partition option if you boot with a card in, and ''install from the live CD''.  Do manual partition options and it's simple to set an SD card as /home.
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-- [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:julie-fuller|LaunchpadHome:julie-fuller]] <<DateTime(2008-10-28T04:46:43Z)>>
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'''Note''': Suspend '''does not work''' with this type of install. Suspend might kill all your data on the SD-Card. [[UbuntuHelp:LaunchpadHome:christian-paratschek|LaunchpadHome:christian-paratschek]]
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* Guide for the AAO 110L and Intrepid (cleaned up version of this one): [[UbuntuHelp:AspireOne110L|AspireOne110L]]
+
* There are internationalization issues with the suggested wireless solution:
+
1. Your AccessPoint will be invisible to your [[UbuntuHelp:NetworkManager|NetworkManager]] Applet if
+
 
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the AP is using an Europe-only channel such as Channel 12 or 13 while it will be visible after changing the AP to e.g. Channel 11. Appending the line
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"options cfg80211 ieee80211_regdom=EU" to /etc/modprobe.d/options file as suggested elsewhere has no effect.
+
2. Connecting over Ch11 to an AP only succeeds if the AP passsword contains no diacrit characters; so presumably passwords should be ASCII only. This is a BUG.
+
 
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Use a fresh install of Ubuntu 8.10 on an Aspire One with the latest Madwifi driver madwifi-hal-0.10.5.6-current as described in this guide. The AP is set for WPA2 Personal/AES.
+
* The shell script that brings the wifi0 down and up after suspend didn't do the job.  Make a minor tweak, replacing the two wifi down and up lines with a single:
+
/etc/init.d/networking restart
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* If you have any questions or new insights about Ubuntu 8.10 on the Acer Aspire One, please consider posting to [http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=966158 this thread] in the forums first. This should help to further unclutter this site.
+
----
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[[category:CategoryWireless]]
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[[category:UbuntuHelp]]
 
[[category:UbuntuHelp]]

2010年5月19日 (三) 21:35的最新版本

About this guide

There are many netbooks under the name "Acer Aspire One". Each component is shared by some of them but in general they are different. The subpages of specific models account for this:

Nevertheless, fixes, enhancements, and solutions for another model may work for your netbook, specially when:

  • The issue is not considered at the subpage specific for your model;
  • The subpage specific for your model is outdated (pages get outdated soon as new releases come);
  • There is no subpage specific for your model.

Warning about outdated pages

The following functionalities improve considerably between two Ubuntu releases: Wireless, Audio, Webcam, Video, Fan control, USB, Sleep, Hibernation. They are likely to be outdated in some of the subpages. In most cases they describe manual fixes that are not necessarily with the latest release.

More material

A previous version of this guide can be found at the Old subpage. It contains mostly outdated data, but can provide useful information, and references. Ubuntu8.04 contains many tweaks that are likely to work for later releases: Font tweaks; SSD Performance; Reduce SSD Wear; Speed up Firefox; Touchpad tweaks; Optimize screen use; Disable Scrollkeeper; Powersaving. These could be recycled and ported to a subpage. Some are deprecated: Screen tweaks (already works out-of-the-box). Ubuntu9.10 contains a brief summary of Ubuntu 9.10 tests with several models: 110L, ZG8, 510, ZG5, P531h, 532h, A150, D150.

Test results

Laptop|testing team

Other distributions

Several other distributions have their own installation guides for the Aspire One.

See also the Debian device driver check page.