The laptop works perfectly with Ubuntu 7.10 64-bit.
The same model number sometimes has different processors and RAM configuration, so the one I have has
1. An Intel Core 2 Duo T7200 2Ghz processor.
2. 1GB of RAM
and is straight from HP.
Connectivity:
- Wireless - It worked right off the bat. All I had to do was select the network and enter my WEP key. Very simple, and really nice. Intel 3945 PRO Wireless.
- Bluetooth: Bluetooth worked perfectly and pairing/bonding works straight off. However you’ll have to install the gnome-vfs-obexftp package to be able to transfer files by obexftp. I hope this is fixed in the next release. You can find the bug here: 131530. Until then, open a terminal and type in:
sudo aptitude install gnome-vfs-obexftp
- Ethernet: Broadcom card, works perfectly out of the box.
- Firewire: I don’t have a firewire device, but they’re rumoured to be compatible.
- USB: All ports work.
- Modem: I no longer have a dialup line so I can’t test this. However the modem is recognised.
Input:
- Touchpad: It’s a Synaptics touchpad and works perfectly. You can even enable a horizontal scroll option even though the touchpad doesn’t have such a place marked. I like to turn off tap-to-click. It’s annoying while typing.
- Keyboard and buttons: All the buttons work perfectly including the volume controls and the bluetooth/wireless button. Power button brings up the ‘Shut down, Restart,…’ screen by default.
Display:
- Graphics work well. 1280×800 out of the box. Desktop Effects work perfectly (except for Blur - which you shouldn’t turn on. It nearly freezes the desktop, supposedly a bug in the Intel driver. The driver itself isn’t great but it works just fine unless you want to play something like Spring). There is one bug, there are 2 or 3 flashes before GDM hits the right resolution and starts up. I’m not sure how to fix this but I don’t think it’s hurting the monitor.
- Dual monitors are still a pain. If I remember right they were easier to set up on the 32-bit version of Gutsy and that makes no sense. Anyway, if you boot up with another monitor connected it will be recognised and your laptop screen will be set to that monitor’s resolution and one will mirror the other. In this setting you can use Desktop Effects. It’s a lot of trouble getting the two monitors to be separate screens and I don’t think you can get Direct Rendering then, so Compiz is out of the question.
- If you use the Fast User Switcher tool to switch users, or if you switch users any other way, the second user will not have hardware acceleration. If you have Compiz enabled you’ll get a grey screen or a white screen. Some people have suggested increasing the VideoRAM through an xorg.conf setting but it hasn’t worked for me at all. I believe it’s a limitation of the Intel driver.
- The dimming-when-off-battery works, and you can also set the brightness using the Fn key and the brightness keys, but I think that’s a hardware setting anyway.
Processor:
- CPU scaling works. If you want to scale the cpu yourself (instead of letting the computer automatically shift) you will need to reconfigure the CPU scaling applet for the Gnome Panel to be root.
- The CPU allows Virtualisation, but you will have to enable it in the BIOS. Hit F8 while the boot screen with HP logo is showing and then go to the advanced settings (I forget what they’re called, it’s one of the right most menu items) and enable VT or virtualisation technology or whatever it’s called in your firmware version.
Sound:
- Output works fine, I don’t have a mic or headphones to test though I suppose they’d be fine.
Power-saving:
- As above, frequency scaling works just fine.
- Suspend works perfectly.
- Hibernate works but it’s slow, take around 20-30 seconds to return from hibernate. It also displays a lot of text (errors?) before hibernating, but restores just fine.
It worked nice and neat out of the box. But then, this laptop has always worked fine with Ubuntu (and probably with other distros too)