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# Friday, December 26, 2008

Merry Christmas to me, my Dell Mini 9 arrived today. I ordered it with a 16GB hard drive and 1GB of ram and Linux. I have plans of installing Windows 7 beta after I get it from attending MSDN Dev Con next month, but there was no way I was just going to wait around with the mini not in use until then. The mini does not come with an optical drive, nor do I have access to a USB optical driver (although it might be a wise investment), so I needed to learn how to install from a USB storage device.

While I found numerous how-to’s, the following You tube walk thru, which uses a utility program from this forum http://www.boot-land.net/forums/?showtopic=4900 is the best way to go in my opinion. It takes care of formatting your USB device, coping files from your Windows XP CD or other location (i.e. if you use a program like vLite to create a stripped down XP install), and setting values for the unattended install answer file (a real bonus feature). Once I found the tool, it was pretty easy to get XP installed, and once XP is installed, it’s like any other computer, where you can just copy your network drivers from a standard USB thumbdrive, then access the rest of your files via your network. I also installed an ISO mounting tool to install applications like Microsoft Office which I store as .Iso.

So far I have the following installed:

  • Office 2007
  • Live Mesh
  • Live Writer
  • Combined Community Codec Pack
  • Pidgen + Simp
  • Foxit PDF Reader

Spent all day yesterday at the in-laws watching movies, surfing the Internet and reading some e-books and the mini worked like a champ. Battery time is around 4 hours which is pretty good on wi-fi, given the small, lightweight form factor. I can get over 3 hours on my wife’s new Dell studio 17, but it weighs in close to 9 lbs. I’m going to keep the mini at work and try to take meeting notes on it, hopefully being able to ditch my pen and paper.

I’m also looking for some type of mounting hardware so I can mount it on the station bike I use so I can use the mini to watch movies during my 2 hour endurance rides. I currently have an older 14” laptop that I take with, but I could easily get 4 hours worth of video playback time out of the mini if I turn the Wifi off. If I’m able to mount it to the station bike right in front of me, the 9” screen will be more then big enough.

I am very happy with my Mini so far, and I am looking forward to running Windows 7 on it in the near future.

Friday, December 26, 2008 8:46:24 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0] -
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Copyright 2010
Adam Salvo
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