Linux Hibernation on Acer Aspire One 522
If you're new to installing / running Linux on the Acer Aspire One 522, check out the Ubuntu documentation page on the topic first. It covers a lot of what does and does not work, as well as workarounds to a few issues. Virtually all of this information also applies to the Acer Aspire One 722 as well.
I've found a way to resolve the network and hibernation problems without the old sloppy workarounds. I'll start with some background, but scroll straight to the bottom if you just want to dive into the solution.
Acer Aspire One 522 - First Impressions
I recently picked up an Acer Aspire One 522, for $330 sold and shipped by Amazon. I'm very pleased with my purchase. I'll publish a bit of info going forward on jumping some of the Linux hurdles, etc... but here's the general overview.
When I started shopping for a netbook, my wishlist involved a rare trinity of stats...
Motorola Dext Unlocking
A minor tech note for anyone else in this situation: I recently bought a Motorola Dext MB200 Android phone, shipped from Canada, originally sold and locked to the carrier Bell. It's a very nice device and I got it for a great price. There are eBay vendors who sell unlock codes for well under $10 for most types of phone, and before buying this phone, I verified that was the case for the Dext.
K2D2
Today I constructed a thing of beauty. The K2D2 is not the distant cousin of a famous Astromech droid... no, the K2D2 is an amalgam of two fine consumer products that were simply destined to meet.
Kentucky Fried Chicken's Double Down sandwich is a delightful thing. Two boneless fried chicken breasts surround bacon, pepperjack cheese, and a savory sauce. One of KFC's advertising claims regarding this masterpeice is that it is so meaty that there was simply no room for a bun.
I thought otherwise.
Taking inspiration from the fabled "Luther" burger and armed with an instrument of plastic cutlery, I obtained one Krispy Kreme glazed donut on my way to lunch with the Colonel.
Viruses...
I've been using computers pretty much constantly for over two and a half decades. Until last week, I had involuntarily acquired viruses zero times. I also maintained that record without constantly running antivirus products... after all, they consume more resources than most viruses, and if you adhere to safe practices, no problem, right?
I learned the hard way that I needed to make a couple amendments to my safe computing practices. I'll share my methods, old and new:
Zipit Z2 - Fluxbox Window Auto-sizing
I've continued to refine my environment on the Zipit Z2, and noticed that the direction towards Matchbox instead of Fluxbox is getting popular, in part, due to default window sizes in Fluxbox greatly exceeding the 320x240 Zipit's screen. I fixed that in Fluxbox with three simple steps:
1) Install DevilsPie.
Zipit Z2 - Font Sizing!
Towards making the Zipit Z2 a useful small computer, there are a few distinct paths:
- Optimize it as a command-line oriented, text-based tool, with lots of custom scripts and appropriate applications.
- Optimize it with a Linux GUI and adapt normal Linux applications to work with the small screen (320x240 pixels)
- Adapt prior work from small screen, PDA-oriented Linux GUIs, such as the work done for the Zaurus platform
I've been making efforts from all three angles... the first being easiest and simplest to acheive, the last offering the cleanest solution through the most effort. Today, I'd like to share some of my success in the second arena.
On my Zipit running Debian, I've finally managed to control font sizes.
Zipit Z2 + Matchbox
I've been following the wonderful hackery going on for the Zipit Z2, mostly following tutorials from the Hunter Davis blog.
After following the Debian Install Instructions he posted, I've done some additions and explorations that I thought were worth sharing:
Mon.itor.us
A couple weeks ago, I started using Mon.itor.us for uptime and response time tracking of my websites. They're free. They use a Netvibes-ish widgety sort of monitoring page where you can build custom graphs and charts for your sites. I'm pretty impressed so far. I tagged my various "External Monitors" (site response and uptime checkers) by the hosting provider, and I'll probably add tags for the software packages I use (Joomla, PHPBB, etc...) to do additional comparisons with their "External Report" feature, which can give you data by tag.
Woot Tracker Updated!
I've added the ability to monitor kids.woot.com from the Woot Tracker Widget. Enjoy!