Tag Archive: Ubuntu

Installing Beryl on Ubuntu Edgy with an Intel Chipset

After installing Edgy, I figured I’d go ahead and install Beryl - an open-source 3d Window Manager that totally rocks.

While this took some doing, it was totally worth it, as the screenshots below will attest to (and when you are done looking at those, you should have a look at some of the YouTube videos on Beryl).

Rotating workspaces/desktops in Beryl on Ubuntu

DemoCamps and Ubuntu Adventures

Yes, I am back to having multiple posts in a single blog entry — I figured that this is better than having several dozen smaller entries.

DemoCamp Cincinnati

Thursday evening was DemoCamp Cincinnati, which was quite fun. A bunch of folks showed up and we had a couple of talks, one of them by a new startup called Mercury Grove. They presented their neat product called Collab which was rather interesting. They seem to have some very interesting people working there, and I just found out that they have a blog, too.

DemoCamp Cincinnati
Click to see more pictures from DemoCamp Cincinnati

Ubuntu Adventures on a Dell e1405

So, I decided to upgrade my Dell notebook from Dapper to Edgy Eft. I have a Dell e1405, which like all notebooks, has the most obscure devices you can ever find (and ergo, is the hardest to find device drivers for). Now, I could not get a lot of things to work on Dapper, so I figured that Edgy Eft would be better.

The Tale of Ubuntu and a Dell Inspiron

The other day, I got a new notebook for myself - the new Dell Inspiron E1405 that was on sale. For about $750, I got a notebook with a decent configuration — Intel Centrino Duo 1.6 GHz, 1 GB RAM, 120 GB HDD, DVD burner and the usual things that notebooks these days come with. Nothing fantastic, but a good configuration neverthless.

It was interesting to note Dell’s change in stance from making boring take-this-or-leave-it boxes to making sleek and slender designs that would have made Steve Jobs proud (and yell, ARRR!). But I digress.

Anyhow, my this notebook-buying was long due, and it was a welcome change from my dead HP Pavilion lead-beast and my dying, older Dell Inspiron monster of a stone.

However, it was a while since I’d run a good distro of Linux at home, and I was itching to try something new - Ubuntu.