Tag Archive for 'hp pavilion dv5'

My Laptop Lament

… or, how I spent the last 6 months trying to get a brand new laptop to suspend / resume correctly … and am still trying.

In a previous post I talked about my initial experiences in choosing an operating system for my laptop; the saga is far from over. I’m trying to be pragmatic, but my unreasonable interest in the underdog OS keeps urging me on. Perhaps it’s my dislike for Microsoft’s decades of overwhelming dominance; why should 6 billion people have only one choice in operating system? Anyway, 100+ subscribers later, and growing, my ubuntu bug report has gathered noticeable community interest but garnered ZERO attention from Canonical or anyone else who could actually help. Over on the Linux Kernel bug report we’ve had far more commitment from Tejun, but even he has his limits.

To be fair to the Ubuntu’s bug reporting system, Launchpad.net, it has acted a focal point for sufferers of the dv5’s refusal to suspend / resume properly under Linux. Aside from a community effort in spamming the HP support teams we’ve also been able to make a small but noticeable protest on the HP forum. But the big question remains, will a fix present itself within the useful life of my laptop?

There is this notion, out there in Linux land, that there are these crack, benevolent developers floating around, just spoiling for a chance to fix someone’s hardware woes. Sadly, I’m yet to meet such coding superheroes. The truth is I’m running Vista and wishing I’d just bought a Mac. Fortunately, I see most of my computing life through the window of Google Chrome, which gives me a sense of having chosen an Open Source-friendly corporate overlord, but it’s not the same. I miss GNOME’s minimalism, the value of F-Spot, the native stability of GIMP and that beautiful, eminently useful, Bash shell.

A laptop is just not a laptop without suspend and resume.

Ubuntu 8.10 on a HP Pavilion dv5

I recently bought a new laptop, a HP Pavilion dv5, mostly out of desperation as I was not able to acquire the new Macbook I really desired. Nonetheless, I’m quite happy with my purchase and have proceeded to play around with both Vista and Ubuntu 8.10 on it. Surprisingly, Ubuntu was significantly easier to install and configure from scratch; the Broadcom Wireless card and the NVIDIA 8600M GT were both detected and drivers installed after my first login. Vista was a different story, it did come with Vista Home but it was the Russian version (as I’m living in Ukraine) so I pulled out the propoganda version that I received at QUT and spent a couple of nights trying to find all the drivers for those pesky unrecognised devices.

So far I’ve been quite happy with Ubuntu 8.10 (Intrepid Ibex) with the exception of one big party-pooper: resume from suspend is broken on my dv5. Hopefully the very active user community will be able to get this resolved. But Vista doesn’t get off cleanly either. I’m really not impressed with how Vista deals with updates, it seems every second or third time I boot up I’m asked to reboot. In fact, at one point I was rudely rebooted whilst playing Call of Duty 4 on account of an update, needless to say I’ve since clipped the wings of Windows Update.