WalMart / Lindows Evaluation Ordered from walmart.com 10/02/02 Shipment Received 10/18/02 Evaluation Written 10/21/02 Intended Use This will be my spouse's system: think jazz singer, previously challenged by Windows98 and successfully surfing the Internet but never really got the hang of Email, and single- versus double-clicking was often a source of confusion especially when some web site was slow to come up. About the System Pluses Cheap, $216.14 delivered ($199.86 plus $16.28 shipping). Plugged directly into my home LAN, configured itself and allowed surfing of the Internet (via my permanent network connection) within 60 seconds of the first bootup. CUPS is pre-installed (as, it appears, are several other [popular?] print subsystems). I added a (networked) printer [via the printer maintenance facility in Lindows, not via CUPS http://localhost:631/ which wanted an unknown user-name and password]) and was printing, in the second 60 seconds after first bootup. Amplified speakers usable (i.e., not too awful) and the sound card works. I was playing MP3s via XMMS within the first hour of dabbling about. Minuses "mount -t nfs xxx:/opt/music /music" took several minutes to complete. Not sure why but, once it finished, accesses to /music appeared to go normally with no untoward delays. (System xxx runs RedHat 7.1 with a 2.4.9-34 RedHat built kernel.) Netscape 7.0 and Konqueror x.x appear to hang in similar manners. Because of the commonality, I suspect the problem is not in either tool but in some other "common" point. Copying 8+ Gigabytes via ftp over the network went smoothly, however, so the basic network seems to be Okay. Automatically logs the user in as "root" upon powerup. (Mega-dangerous for newbies!) No apparent mechanism to change this. Considering my spouse's naivete (sp?), I'm pretty much guaranteed a slow accumulation of problems that will one day necessitate a "format and rebuild" solution. Zero printed documentation on Lindows. A "First Time User" guide would have seemed like an obvious requirement for the market they are after. (If left uncorrected, I'd say this omission will be Lindows' downfall.) Although I rarely use floppies anymore, and therefore I didn't think I would care that there isn't one, there *is* a /mnt/floppy mount point and, when browsing through /mnt on my way to an NFS mount (/mnt/music) I had added, XMMS's file open window got "stuck" presumably trying to scan the non-existent hardware device. (I have *not* verified if adding a floppy drive will solve this annoyance -- the WalMart shipment includes the necessary signal cable and I'll be adding a floppy drive shortly just to avoid this nuisance.) Other Comments No monitor (nor did I want one as I already had a spare available). No fan. Closed boxes without fans make me nervous. I'll add one for my own peace of mind. Printed documentation consisted of a "Microtel Computer System" installation ("plug the keyboard here") guide [a 12 page booklet containing 2 pages of "meat"], a WalMart.com "Return Label" (for return shipment if needed), and a User's Manual for the motherboard (GA-6VEM series, GBT Technology, Hamberg Germany). There was no additional documentation recorded on the "Recovery Disk" -- the Installation Notes file was not much more than an http: link to lindows.com. Comes with two (2) CDROMs: Lindows OS Certified Recovery Disk, and a utilities (all Windows) disk [various drivers, BIOS flash utility and a demo of somthing -- none of which I examined]. The 10 Gbyte disk has less than 1 Gbyte installed upon delivery. Lots of room is available but, on the other hand, lots of things (I'm accustomed to) are presumably missing. Lindows is a Debian derivitive. I'm more familiar with RedHat and, from time to time, the differences force me to go off and learn how to do something in Debian. It's six of one versus half a dozen of the other, but because of the path I've been on for the past two years, Debian is a "speed bump" to my getting things done. In the long run, knowing alternative ways of doing things *may* be beneficial but only time will tell. Immediate Plans Add a floppy drive (out of habit and to avoid the /mnt browsing delay [see above]). Add a fan (to silence my un-ease). Install RedHat 8.0 (downloaded last weekend). Set the box up for an easy login and two desktop icons for my spouse: Mozilla and PowerOff. -- Ed Skinner, ed@flat5.net, http://www.flat5.net/