Ubuntu on an Asus EEE PC 4G (701)
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I'm a new user to Ubuntu, but having installed it on my main laptop I found that I really like the UI and the usability.
I have an Asus eee PC 4G that's been sitting spare for a few years now and would love to be able to get Ubuntu installed on it but I'm unsure on what distro to pick for it as when I tried with the same version I put on my main laptop it came up with a CPU compatibility error.
So any help is really appreciated.
asus eeepc
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I'm a new user to Ubuntu, but having installed it on my main laptop I found that I really like the UI and the usability.
I have an Asus eee PC 4G that's been sitting spare for a few years now and would love to be able to get Ubuntu installed on it but I'm unsure on what distro to pick for it as when I tried with the same version I put on my main laptop it came up with a CPU compatibility error.
So any help is really appreciated.
asus eeepc
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I'm a new user to Ubuntu, but having installed it on my main laptop I found that I really like the UI and the usability.
I have an Asus eee PC 4G that's been sitting spare for a few years now and would love to be able to get Ubuntu installed on it but I'm unsure on what distro to pick for it as when I tried with the same version I put on my main laptop it came up with a CPU compatibility error.
So any help is really appreciated.
asus eeepc
I'm a new user to Ubuntu, but having installed it on my main laptop I found that I really like the UI and the usability.
I have an Asus eee PC 4G that's been sitting spare for a few years now and would love to be able to get Ubuntu installed on it but I'm unsure on what distro to pick for it as when I tried with the same version I put on my main laptop it came up with a CPU compatibility error.
So any help is really appreciated.
asus eeepc
asus eeepc
asked Feb 8 '14 at 19:25
Pyrotequila
2112
2112
add a comment |
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
For the EEE 701 I have tried a lot of different versions of Ubuntu. Now I am very content with the "Peppermint ICE" version.
The connections go very good and you still can add a lot of functional apps.
So try it!
Let me now.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
For the benefit of other nostalgic owners of the (old but still cute) Eee PC.
After some fight, today (2018/12/8) I managed to install Lubuntu 12-04 on my Eee PC 4G, portuguese keyboard and all.
What I learned:
The oficial repository seems to be broken but this mirror is up: https://phillw.net/isos/lubuntu/precise/
The alternate installers of versions 16.04 and 12.04 won't install.
The desktop versions of 14-04 and 16.04 won't work al all.
The desktop installer of 12.04 works but when trying to install complains about the HDD being smaller than 4.4GB. The trick to overcome this was to plug in a pendrive with more than 4.4GB and then it installed by default on the internal HDD with 1GB still to spare.
New contributor
An alternative is to create a persistent live system in the 4 GB SSD in your eeePC. The main image is compressed (from the iso file), and there will be more drive space available for extra program packages and your own data files (to be saved in thecasper-rw
file or partition). mkusb creates persistent live drives withcasper-rw
partitions for 14.04 and newer versions. You can use Unetbootin to create a persistent live drive with acasper-rw
file for Lubuntu 12.04 (I tested Unetbootin version 667 in Lubuntu 18.04.1 LTS).
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:01
I have installed Xubuntu 14.04 LTS in a friend's eeePC 900. This is a full installation which works in that computer with a 9 GB SSD.
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:07
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Try the following link http://www.eeebuntu.org/release/eeebuntu or as another option would be maybe a netbook remix version of ubuntu on one of the archive versions. I did this a while ago and used an image unpacked onto an SD card to perform the install, after some settings changes in the BIOS (had to flash new BIOS version) to change the boot order it was pretty simple.
I made a USB installer from the release on that site, but it still will not try to boot from the USB, it just boots to desktop and opens it in a file explorer. I seem to have changed the boot order in the BIOS, but it still just loads the desktop... frustrating!
– Pyrotequila
Feb 9 '14 at 14:42
1
The link is broken
– GunJack
May 23 '16 at 4:27
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Is the architecture version you tried 64bit? For a EEE PC 701 4G, you need to install the 32bit version.
You don't say what version Ubuntu you tried. I have had 10.04 running for a few years now, and have previously booted 12.04 as a LiveUSB.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Since it just have 512MB ram. I would advise against running the regular Ubuntu - Unity, Gnome or KDE version. It would be better to use lightweight version like Lubuntu, Xubuntu and Ubuntu. Your eeePC has a 32 bit processor, so try installing 32-bit version of these distributions. The best choice would be Lubuntu 14.04.4 LTS. Download Here
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If I remember correctly, that machine uses a Celeron M processor that does not support Physical Address Extensions (PAE), so the error you were likely getting was something like, "This kernel requires the following features not present on the CPU: pae."
You will need a 32 bit distribution that supports non-pae processors, which is getting harder to find. You might try reading this article for wisdom on getting Lubuntu or Xubuntu working on this machine. However it did not run very well the last time I tried it. I ended up trying to use bodhi Linux, which i believe still has a non-pae supporting kernel available. I also gave puppy Linux a good run, but that one doesn't like to be installed, but rather run as a bootable live image.
If you are feeling particularly crafty, I've heard talked of folks getting arch Linux working on these. You will have to pull out your best Google foo for that one though.
Good luck!
add a comment |
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6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
For the EEE 701 I have tried a lot of different versions of Ubuntu. Now I am very content with the "Peppermint ICE" version.
The connections go very good and you still can add a lot of functional apps.
So try it!
Let me now.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
For the EEE 701 I have tried a lot of different versions of Ubuntu. Now I am very content with the "Peppermint ICE" version.
The connections go very good and you still can add a lot of functional apps.
So try it!
Let me now.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
For the EEE 701 I have tried a lot of different versions of Ubuntu. Now I am very content with the "Peppermint ICE" version.
The connections go very good and you still can add a lot of functional apps.
So try it!
Let me now.
For the EEE 701 I have tried a lot of different versions of Ubuntu. Now I am very content with the "Peppermint ICE" version.
The connections go very good and you still can add a lot of functional apps.
So try it!
Let me now.
answered May 30 '14 at 17:49
WF Maan
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
For the benefit of other nostalgic owners of the (old but still cute) Eee PC.
After some fight, today (2018/12/8) I managed to install Lubuntu 12-04 on my Eee PC 4G, portuguese keyboard and all.
What I learned:
The oficial repository seems to be broken but this mirror is up: https://phillw.net/isos/lubuntu/precise/
The alternate installers of versions 16.04 and 12.04 won't install.
The desktop versions of 14-04 and 16.04 won't work al all.
The desktop installer of 12.04 works but when trying to install complains about the HDD being smaller than 4.4GB. The trick to overcome this was to plug in a pendrive with more than 4.4GB and then it installed by default on the internal HDD with 1GB still to spare.
New contributor
An alternative is to create a persistent live system in the 4 GB SSD in your eeePC. The main image is compressed (from the iso file), and there will be more drive space available for extra program packages and your own data files (to be saved in thecasper-rw
file or partition). mkusb creates persistent live drives withcasper-rw
partitions for 14.04 and newer versions. You can use Unetbootin to create a persistent live drive with acasper-rw
file for Lubuntu 12.04 (I tested Unetbootin version 667 in Lubuntu 18.04.1 LTS).
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:01
I have installed Xubuntu 14.04 LTS in a friend's eeePC 900. This is a full installation which works in that computer with a 9 GB SSD.
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:07
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
For the benefit of other nostalgic owners of the (old but still cute) Eee PC.
After some fight, today (2018/12/8) I managed to install Lubuntu 12-04 on my Eee PC 4G, portuguese keyboard and all.
What I learned:
The oficial repository seems to be broken but this mirror is up: https://phillw.net/isos/lubuntu/precise/
The alternate installers of versions 16.04 and 12.04 won't install.
The desktop versions of 14-04 and 16.04 won't work al all.
The desktop installer of 12.04 works but when trying to install complains about the HDD being smaller than 4.4GB. The trick to overcome this was to plug in a pendrive with more than 4.4GB and then it installed by default on the internal HDD with 1GB still to spare.
New contributor
An alternative is to create a persistent live system in the 4 GB SSD in your eeePC. The main image is compressed (from the iso file), and there will be more drive space available for extra program packages and your own data files (to be saved in thecasper-rw
file or partition). mkusb creates persistent live drives withcasper-rw
partitions for 14.04 and newer versions. You can use Unetbootin to create a persistent live drive with acasper-rw
file for Lubuntu 12.04 (I tested Unetbootin version 667 in Lubuntu 18.04.1 LTS).
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:01
I have installed Xubuntu 14.04 LTS in a friend's eeePC 900. This is a full installation which works in that computer with a 9 GB SSD.
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:07
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
For the benefit of other nostalgic owners of the (old but still cute) Eee PC.
After some fight, today (2018/12/8) I managed to install Lubuntu 12-04 on my Eee PC 4G, portuguese keyboard and all.
What I learned:
The oficial repository seems to be broken but this mirror is up: https://phillw.net/isos/lubuntu/precise/
The alternate installers of versions 16.04 and 12.04 won't install.
The desktop versions of 14-04 and 16.04 won't work al all.
The desktop installer of 12.04 works but when trying to install complains about the HDD being smaller than 4.4GB. The trick to overcome this was to plug in a pendrive with more than 4.4GB and then it installed by default on the internal HDD with 1GB still to spare.
New contributor
For the benefit of other nostalgic owners of the (old but still cute) Eee PC.
After some fight, today (2018/12/8) I managed to install Lubuntu 12-04 on my Eee PC 4G, portuguese keyboard and all.
What I learned:
The oficial repository seems to be broken but this mirror is up: https://phillw.net/isos/lubuntu/precise/
The alternate installers of versions 16.04 and 12.04 won't install.
The desktop versions of 14-04 and 16.04 won't work al all.
The desktop installer of 12.04 works but when trying to install complains about the HDD being smaller than 4.4GB. The trick to overcome this was to plug in a pendrive with more than 4.4GB and then it installed by default on the internal HDD with 1GB still to spare.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Dec 8 at 20:24
Paulo Fonte
111
111
New contributor
New contributor
An alternative is to create a persistent live system in the 4 GB SSD in your eeePC. The main image is compressed (from the iso file), and there will be more drive space available for extra program packages and your own data files (to be saved in thecasper-rw
file or partition). mkusb creates persistent live drives withcasper-rw
partitions for 14.04 and newer versions. You can use Unetbootin to create a persistent live drive with acasper-rw
file for Lubuntu 12.04 (I tested Unetbootin version 667 in Lubuntu 18.04.1 LTS).
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:01
I have installed Xubuntu 14.04 LTS in a friend's eeePC 900. This is a full installation which works in that computer with a 9 GB SSD.
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:07
add a comment |
An alternative is to create a persistent live system in the 4 GB SSD in your eeePC. The main image is compressed (from the iso file), and there will be more drive space available for extra program packages and your own data files (to be saved in thecasper-rw
file or partition). mkusb creates persistent live drives withcasper-rw
partitions for 14.04 and newer versions. You can use Unetbootin to create a persistent live drive with acasper-rw
file for Lubuntu 12.04 (I tested Unetbootin version 667 in Lubuntu 18.04.1 LTS).
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:01
I have installed Xubuntu 14.04 LTS in a friend's eeePC 900. This is a full installation which works in that computer with a 9 GB SSD.
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:07
An alternative is to create a persistent live system in the 4 GB SSD in your eeePC. The main image is compressed (from the iso file), and there will be more drive space available for extra program packages and your own data files (to be saved in the
casper-rw
file or partition). mkusb creates persistent live drives with casper-rw
partitions for 14.04 and newer versions. You can use Unetbootin to create a persistent live drive with a casper-rw
file for Lubuntu 12.04 (I tested Unetbootin version 667 in Lubuntu 18.04.1 LTS).– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:01
An alternative is to create a persistent live system in the 4 GB SSD in your eeePC. The main image is compressed (from the iso file), and there will be more drive space available for extra program packages and your own data files (to be saved in the
casper-rw
file or partition). mkusb creates persistent live drives with casper-rw
partitions for 14.04 and newer versions. You can use Unetbootin to create a persistent live drive with a casper-rw
file for Lubuntu 12.04 (I tested Unetbootin version 667 in Lubuntu 18.04.1 LTS).– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:01
I have installed Xubuntu 14.04 LTS in a friend's eeePC 900. This is a full installation which works in that computer with a 9 GB SSD.
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:07
I have installed Xubuntu 14.04 LTS in a friend's eeePC 900. This is a full installation which works in that computer with a 9 GB SSD.
– sudodus
Dec 9 at 0:07
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Try the following link http://www.eeebuntu.org/release/eeebuntu or as another option would be maybe a netbook remix version of ubuntu on one of the archive versions. I did this a while ago and used an image unpacked onto an SD card to perform the install, after some settings changes in the BIOS (had to flash new BIOS version) to change the boot order it was pretty simple.
I made a USB installer from the release on that site, but it still will not try to boot from the USB, it just boots to desktop and opens it in a file explorer. I seem to have changed the boot order in the BIOS, but it still just loads the desktop... frustrating!
– Pyrotequila
Feb 9 '14 at 14:42
1
The link is broken
– GunJack
May 23 '16 at 4:27
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Try the following link http://www.eeebuntu.org/release/eeebuntu or as another option would be maybe a netbook remix version of ubuntu on one of the archive versions. I did this a while ago and used an image unpacked onto an SD card to perform the install, after some settings changes in the BIOS (had to flash new BIOS version) to change the boot order it was pretty simple.
I made a USB installer from the release on that site, but it still will not try to boot from the USB, it just boots to desktop and opens it in a file explorer. I seem to have changed the boot order in the BIOS, but it still just loads the desktop... frustrating!
– Pyrotequila
Feb 9 '14 at 14:42
1
The link is broken
– GunJack
May 23 '16 at 4:27
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Try the following link http://www.eeebuntu.org/release/eeebuntu or as another option would be maybe a netbook remix version of ubuntu on one of the archive versions. I did this a while ago and used an image unpacked onto an SD card to perform the install, after some settings changes in the BIOS (had to flash new BIOS version) to change the boot order it was pretty simple.
Try the following link http://www.eeebuntu.org/release/eeebuntu or as another option would be maybe a netbook remix version of ubuntu on one of the archive versions. I did this a while ago and used an image unpacked onto an SD card to perform the install, after some settings changes in the BIOS (had to flash new BIOS version) to change the boot order it was pretty simple.
answered Feb 8 '14 at 20:40
Kai
539411
539411
I made a USB installer from the release on that site, but it still will not try to boot from the USB, it just boots to desktop and opens it in a file explorer. I seem to have changed the boot order in the BIOS, but it still just loads the desktop... frustrating!
– Pyrotequila
Feb 9 '14 at 14:42
1
The link is broken
– GunJack
May 23 '16 at 4:27
add a comment |
I made a USB installer from the release on that site, but it still will not try to boot from the USB, it just boots to desktop and opens it in a file explorer. I seem to have changed the boot order in the BIOS, but it still just loads the desktop... frustrating!
– Pyrotequila
Feb 9 '14 at 14:42
1
The link is broken
– GunJack
May 23 '16 at 4:27
I made a USB installer from the release on that site, but it still will not try to boot from the USB, it just boots to desktop and opens it in a file explorer. I seem to have changed the boot order in the BIOS, but it still just loads the desktop... frustrating!
– Pyrotequila
Feb 9 '14 at 14:42
I made a USB installer from the release on that site, but it still will not try to boot from the USB, it just boots to desktop and opens it in a file explorer. I seem to have changed the boot order in the BIOS, but it still just loads the desktop... frustrating!
– Pyrotequila
Feb 9 '14 at 14:42
1
1
The link is broken
– GunJack
May 23 '16 at 4:27
The link is broken
– GunJack
May 23 '16 at 4:27
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Is the architecture version you tried 64bit? For a EEE PC 701 4G, you need to install the 32bit version.
You don't say what version Ubuntu you tried. I have had 10.04 running for a few years now, and have previously booted 12.04 as a LiveUSB.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Is the architecture version you tried 64bit? For a EEE PC 701 4G, you need to install the 32bit version.
You don't say what version Ubuntu you tried. I have had 10.04 running for a few years now, and have previously booted 12.04 as a LiveUSB.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Is the architecture version you tried 64bit? For a EEE PC 701 4G, you need to install the 32bit version.
You don't say what version Ubuntu you tried. I have had 10.04 running for a few years now, and have previously booted 12.04 as a LiveUSB.
Is the architecture version you tried 64bit? For a EEE PC 701 4G, you need to install the 32bit version.
You don't say what version Ubuntu you tried. I have had 10.04 running for a few years now, and have previously booted 12.04 as a LiveUSB.
answered Feb 19 '14 at 20:22
mcchots
232212
232212
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Since it just have 512MB ram. I would advise against running the regular Ubuntu - Unity, Gnome or KDE version. It would be better to use lightweight version like Lubuntu, Xubuntu and Ubuntu. Your eeePC has a 32 bit processor, so try installing 32-bit version of these distributions. The best choice would be Lubuntu 14.04.4 LTS. Download Here
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Since it just have 512MB ram. I would advise against running the regular Ubuntu - Unity, Gnome or KDE version. It would be better to use lightweight version like Lubuntu, Xubuntu and Ubuntu. Your eeePC has a 32 bit processor, so try installing 32-bit version of these distributions. The best choice would be Lubuntu 14.04.4 LTS. Download Here
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Since it just have 512MB ram. I would advise against running the regular Ubuntu - Unity, Gnome or KDE version. It would be better to use lightweight version like Lubuntu, Xubuntu and Ubuntu. Your eeePC has a 32 bit processor, so try installing 32-bit version of these distributions. The best choice would be Lubuntu 14.04.4 LTS. Download Here
Since it just have 512MB ram. I would advise against running the regular Ubuntu - Unity, Gnome or KDE version. It would be better to use lightweight version like Lubuntu, Xubuntu and Ubuntu. Your eeePC has a 32 bit processor, so try installing 32-bit version of these distributions. The best choice would be Lubuntu 14.04.4 LTS. Download Here
answered May 23 '16 at 4:33
GunJack
1501316
1501316
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If I remember correctly, that machine uses a Celeron M processor that does not support Physical Address Extensions (PAE), so the error you were likely getting was something like, "This kernel requires the following features not present on the CPU: pae."
You will need a 32 bit distribution that supports non-pae processors, which is getting harder to find. You might try reading this article for wisdom on getting Lubuntu or Xubuntu working on this machine. However it did not run very well the last time I tried it. I ended up trying to use bodhi Linux, which i believe still has a non-pae supporting kernel available. I also gave puppy Linux a good run, but that one doesn't like to be installed, but rather run as a bootable live image.
If you are feeling particularly crafty, I've heard talked of folks getting arch Linux working on these. You will have to pull out your best Google foo for that one though.
Good luck!
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If I remember correctly, that machine uses a Celeron M processor that does not support Physical Address Extensions (PAE), so the error you were likely getting was something like, "This kernel requires the following features not present on the CPU: pae."
You will need a 32 bit distribution that supports non-pae processors, which is getting harder to find. You might try reading this article for wisdom on getting Lubuntu or Xubuntu working on this machine. However it did not run very well the last time I tried it. I ended up trying to use bodhi Linux, which i believe still has a non-pae supporting kernel available. I also gave puppy Linux a good run, but that one doesn't like to be installed, but rather run as a bootable live image.
If you are feeling particularly crafty, I've heard talked of folks getting arch Linux working on these. You will have to pull out your best Google foo for that one though.
Good luck!
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
If I remember correctly, that machine uses a Celeron M processor that does not support Physical Address Extensions (PAE), so the error you were likely getting was something like, "This kernel requires the following features not present on the CPU: pae."
You will need a 32 bit distribution that supports non-pae processors, which is getting harder to find. You might try reading this article for wisdom on getting Lubuntu or Xubuntu working on this machine. However it did not run very well the last time I tried it. I ended up trying to use bodhi Linux, which i believe still has a non-pae supporting kernel available. I also gave puppy Linux a good run, but that one doesn't like to be installed, but rather run as a bootable live image.
If you are feeling particularly crafty, I've heard talked of folks getting arch Linux working on these. You will have to pull out your best Google foo for that one though.
Good luck!
If I remember correctly, that machine uses a Celeron M processor that does not support Physical Address Extensions (PAE), so the error you were likely getting was something like, "This kernel requires the following features not present on the CPU: pae."
You will need a 32 bit distribution that supports non-pae processors, which is getting harder to find. You might try reading this article for wisdom on getting Lubuntu or Xubuntu working on this machine. However it did not run very well the last time I tried it. I ended up trying to use bodhi Linux, which i believe still has a non-pae supporting kernel available. I also gave puppy Linux a good run, but that one doesn't like to be installed, but rather run as a bootable live image.
If you are feeling particularly crafty, I've heard talked of folks getting arch Linux working on these. You will have to pull out your best Google foo for that one though.
Good luck!
answered May 23 '16 at 5:51
T0beus
55127
55127
add a comment |
add a comment |
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