snugglekitty: (Default)
snugglekitty ([personal profile] snugglekitty) wrote2010-07-31 02:37 pm
Entry tags:

bloodied but unbowed

So, thus far I have not yet cracked the nut of installing Linux on my old laptop.



First, I tried installing from a live CD I had made. This was an utter failure. Not until many hours later did I realize that while the install CD burned perfectly, the CD/DVD drive on the old laptop is no longer working. Yeah, that could be a bit of a problem, couldn't it? I remember I had been having some problems with the drive, but that it was still working some of the time. (Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] lackofcontext for her help.)

Second, I tried doing a WUBI. I had read online that that tended to be buggy. Boy, they weren't wrong. I got the WUBI to run, however on reboot the installation would not complete. I would get an error message saying that the username was invalid, without ever having been prompted for a username. I was able to find some forum support for this issue, but it was for a much earlier release and I couldn't access the file I was supposed to edit in order to fix it (assuming I read the directions correctly).

At this point, I see a few options. In order of the amount of effort I think I'd need to expend, from least to most, here they are.

1) Decide it's not meant to be. Keep old box running on Windows XP until I replace it with a netbook (my eventual plan was to use that as a docking station, but as I was posting, having two computer is incredibly useful).
2) Retry WUBI, probably on the version that the fix was posted for (7.04 or some such) and then upgrade it.
3) When I get my spare USB key back from the person who has it, use that to load Ubuntu and attempt to boot from the USB. (Apparently, I'm not the only person with this problem.)
4) Get a cheap external CD drive (possibly borrowing it from someone - [livejournal.com profile] mrpet? [profile] cystennin

Am I missing anything? Will one or more of these be more likely to work than others? Other options I should consider?

It was fun trying out the live CD on my new laptop (at this point a year and a half old, with a year and a half of warranty left to run). I can see why people like Ubuntu - it's clean and easy to use even if you don't know much about what you're doing, and the included open-source software seems good too.

[identity profile] cystennin.livejournal.com 2010-07-31 10:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I have an external drive you can borrow, but then again I also happen to live with the person who has your USB key. Though some machines seem to dislike booting from those.

For what it's worth, I could get the WUBI or live CD to install on this machine, I had to use the install CD I burned, deleting all my Windows partitions and creating new Linux ones.

[identity profile] lady-anemone.livejournal.com 2010-08-01 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Okay, thanks. [livejournal.com profile] mrpet lent me his external drive - this did not work. Apparently no laptops in the Latitude series can boot via USB, period. So there go options #3 and #4.

I am now looking into a NIC boot, but I realize I'm starting to get near the bottom of the barrel as far as options go.

[identity profile] cystennin.livejournal.com 2010-08-01 08:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Sometimes you can enable booting from USB by going into the bios (holding f2 or some other key down at boot - usually it will say) and then looking for the option to turn it on, or to alter the boot order.

Won't help if they deliberately left out the option on your model, though. I'll do some googling and see if I can find a workaround.

[identity profile] lady-anemone.livejournal.com 2010-08-01 08:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, not so much, tried that already. I can't update the BIOS (it wants me to burn a floppy for that, ha ha*) and anyhow, the latest BIOS update for my model (A23 for Dell Latitude C500/600) does not include a USB boot.

I am now trying Option #2, retry WUBI with 7.04.01, the version with forum support for my "invalid login" issue. It's downloading the ISO even as we speak.

A workaround would be lovely. I think at this point I am only a few steps away from giving up. After this I will attempt a NIC boot, which right now I see as my final option.

*This option was permanently destroyed when my new CD/DVD drive was put in, the drives can no longer be swapped out even if I still had them.

[identity profile] cystennin.livejournal.com 2010-08-01 08:57 pm (UTC)(link)
No good ideas yet. All I've found so far are suggestions to use floppy disks and/or swap out Windows files with hacked versions, which wouldn't help anyway once you wiped Windows.