Difference between revisions of "User:Nynexman4464/Installing Ubuntu 6.06 on a ThinkPad T23"
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It just works<sup>TM</sup> | It just works<sup>TM</sup> | ||
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+ | ==Summary== | ||
===What Works Out of the Box=== | ===What Works Out of the Box=== | ||
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* Volume Buttons | * Volume Buttons | ||
− | ==Not Tested (yet)== | + | ===Not Tested (yet)=== |
* IRDA | * IRDA | ||
* Wired Lan | * Wired Lan | ||
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
− | ===volume=== | + | ====volume buttons==== |
Volume buttons were originally causing software mixer to change volume. As the T23 has a hardware mixer, this was causing the volume range to be reduced since both were adjusted at the same time. Upon attempting to disable the adjustment I came across hotkey-setup and thinkpad-keys. I ran them in an attempt to see what they did. The net effect of this was that it seemed to bork the configuration of the volume keys (ie, they didn't work). Although this is what I wanted, it wasn't the way I wanted to do it (I since discovered that the keys are configured under system->preferences->keyboard shortcuts). The keys seem not to generate events any longer. Warrants further investigation. | Volume buttons were originally causing software mixer to change volume. As the T23 has a hardware mixer, this was causing the volume range to be reduced since both were adjusted at the same time. Upon attempting to disable the adjustment I came across hotkey-setup and thinkpad-keys. I ran them in an attempt to see what they did. The net effect of this was that it seemed to bork the configuration of the volume keys (ie, they didn't work). Although this is what I wanted, it wasn't the way I wanted to do it (I since discovered that the keys are configured under system->preferences->keyboard shortcuts). The keys seem not to generate events any longer. Warrants further investigation. | ||
− | ===wireless=== | + | ====wireless==== |
When I first installed ubuntu, I could not seem to get wireless to work (configuring it with system->administration->networking). I gave up on it for a while. When I tried it again later on, it worked. I didn't install any updates (since I had no network) so I assume it was probably me typing the WEP key incorrectly. | When I first installed ubuntu, I could not seem to get wireless to work (configuring it with system->administration->networking). I gave up on it for a while. When I tried it again later on, it worked. I didn't install any updates (since I had no network) so I assume it was probably me typing the WEP key incorrectly. |
Revision as of 04:00, 6 September 2006
TODO
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This isn't really done, I just wanted a place to put what I had done so far.
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It just worksTM
Contents
Summary
What Works Out of the Box
- Display
- Sound
- Wireless
- USB
- Proccessor frequency scaling
- Hibernate (suspend to disk)
- Suspend (suspend to ram)
- Function Buttons (generate ACPI events)
- Lid Switch
- Brightness (adjusts when on battery)
- Laptop-mode (after setting to true in /etc/default/acpi-support)
What Works After Tweaking
- Volume Buttons
Not Tested (yet)
- IRDA
- Wired Lan
- PCMCIA
- UltraBay 2000
- Modem
- TV Out
- External VGA (seems to switch when button pressed)
Notes
volume buttons
Volume buttons were originally causing software mixer to change volume. As the T23 has a hardware mixer, this was causing the volume range to be reduced since both were adjusted at the same time. Upon attempting to disable the adjustment I came across hotkey-setup and thinkpad-keys. I ran them in an attempt to see what they did. The net effect of this was that it seemed to bork the configuration of the volume keys (ie, they didn't work). Although this is what I wanted, it wasn't the way I wanted to do it (I since discovered that the keys are configured under system->preferences->keyboard shortcuts). The keys seem not to generate events any longer. Warrants further investigation.
wireless
When I first installed ubuntu, I could not seem to get wireless to work (configuring it with system->administration->networking). I gave up on it for a while. When I tried it again later on, it worked. I didn't install any updates (since I had no network) so I assume it was probably me typing the WEP key incorrectly.