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gdsmit1 gdsmit1 is offline
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Default Linux Mint 13 MATE edition - 07-19-2012, 12:21 AM

I've been running the stock Linux distro on my Dell Inspiron Mini 10v since I bought it. Well that's getting kind of old and since it isn't supported any longer, I figure it's time to install a new distro. I decided to give Linux Mint 13 a try. I booted it up on a 4 gig USB stick. It seemed to work pretty well. The screen sized fine and all applications I tried worked well.

However, the wireless isn't working. When I click on the network icon, it says firmware is missing. I know that wireless was one of the problems with older distros, but I figured that this would be supported out of the box.

So has anyone worked through getting their wireless working with Linux Mint 13 and a Dell Inspiron Mini 10?

Last edited by gdsmit1; 07-19-2012 at 08:38 PM.
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Dan_Shane Dan_Shane is offline
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Default 07-20-2012, 06:52 PM

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Originally Posted by gdsmit1 View Post
I've been running the stock Linux distro on my Dell Inspiron Mini 10v since I bought it. Well that's getting kind of old and since it isn't supported any longer, I figure it's time to install a new distro. I decided to give Linux Mint 13 a try. I booted it up on a 4 gig USB stick. It seemed to work pretty well. The screen sized fine and all applications I tried worked well.

However, the wireless isn't working. When I click on the network icon, it says firmware is missing. I know that wireless was one of the problems with older distros, but I figured that this would be supported out of the box.

So has anyone worked through getting their wireless working with Linux Mint 13 and a Dell Inspiron Mini 10?
I'm running Mint 13 on my Latitude 2100, and I faced the same issue with the wireless adapter. The trick is to use a wired Ethernet connection to the Web, then allow the installation of 3rd-party drivers.

Go into System Tools / System Settings. The 2nd field down should be Hardware, and the 1st icon should be Additional Drivers. Click on that and Mint should do a search for proprietary drivers, resulting in the Broadcom STA Wireless Driver. Install that and you are good to go.

You are going to love Mint!


-- Dan Shane --

Dell Latitude 2100 | Ball Field Green | 2 GB RAM | 500GB 7200 RPM HD | Windows 8.1 Enterprise| Mac OS X 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard)

Dell Inspiron Duo | 2 GB RAM | 320GB 7200 RPM HD | Windows 8.1 Enterprise| Mac OS X 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard)
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gdsmit1 gdsmit1 is offline
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Default 07-23-2012, 06:14 PM

I'm installing right now. I did briefly look through the menus, and I'm not finding System Tools anywhere. But that's probably because I'm installing the XCFE version. I'll dig more once it's installed.

Thanks

Last edited by gdsmit1; 07-23-2012 at 08:23 PM.
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gdsmit1 gdsmit1 is offline
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Default 07-23-2012, 09:05 PM

I went back and installed the MATE version like I put in the subject. Your steps seem to have worked perfectly. Here's hoping that the MATE desktop isn't too much for this little netbook. If it is, I guess I can just install XFCE.

Thanks
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gdsmit1 gdsmit1 is offline
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Default 07-24-2012, 11:51 AM

I was able to play around a little bit with it last night. It seems to take a bit longer to boot up, or maybe it's just that it seems to take longer since I sit there with a black screen until I have a log in screen.

The only issue I have so far is with GPodder. The newer version does not sync the same way with my MP3 player, but that's not really a big deal.
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Dan_Shane Dan_Shane is offline
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Default 07-24-2012, 06:54 PM

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Originally Posted by gdsmit1 View Post
I was able to play around a little bit with it last night. It seems to take a bit longer to boot up, or maybe it's just that it seems to take longer since I sit there with a black screen until I have a log in screen.

The only issue I have so far is with GPodder. The newer version does not sync the same way with my MP3 player, but that's not really a big deal.
I agree the boot time seems more than one would expect, and first time running some apps also is not instantaneous. But I experienced similar times with Ubuntu and SUSE Linux, so it appears the Atom processor likes Windows a little better.

Still, after being logged into the GUI for a few minutes the performance seems to pick up.

I don't boot into Mint a lot, but I do enjoy having that option. There is a lot of peripheral development out there that relies on Linux, and Mint allows me to take advantage of that without sacrificing a GUI that is easy to navigate.


-- Dan Shane --

Dell Latitude 2100 | Ball Field Green | 2 GB RAM | 500GB 7200 RPM HD | Windows 8.1 Enterprise| Mac OS X 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard)

Dell Inspiron Duo | 2 GB RAM | 320GB 7200 RPM HD | Windows 8.1 Enterprise| Mac OS X 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard)
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gdsmit1 gdsmit1 is offline
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Default 07-25-2012, 05:26 PM

I only boot into Linux. I had an old laptop that I dual booted with XP and Ubuntu. I found that ubuntu took 45 seconds to boot to a usable state. XP took just shy of 5 minutes to come up and bring up all the required security applications.
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