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January 16, 2009

18

Nine Reasons Every Eee PC User Should Get Easy Peasy

easy-peasy-logoIn my previous write-up about my six-month journey with the Eee PC, I spent a fair amount of time griping about the default install OS. Though a few of my complaints, such as battery life and keyboard, were primarily related to the laptop itself, most were more software-oriented.

Shortly after penning that review and opening up my Eee PC to use the version 2.0.0.20 Firefox that was inside (there was no means to update to 3.x) I realized I had to change something. With all of the system software hopelessly out of date, the OS wasn’t merely annoying, but dangerous.

So, I did a little bit of research, learned how to install Linux distros using UNetbootin and raced to download an ISO of the latest Ubuntu version.

The experience, however, was less than rewarding. Though the install worked perfectly, requiring only a free 1 GB pen drive, which they now give out in cereal boxes, Ubuntu was a poor fit for the Eee.

The wifi didn’t work properly, the OS gladly ate up much of my precious screen real estate and it required some brutal hacking to get everything running.

Then I read about Easy Peasy, formerly known as Ubuntu Eee (I’m forced to assume the name was dropped fr trademark reasons). I gave it a whirl and it was a like a breath of fresh air. Not only did everything work out of the box, but the system was up to date, shiny and new.

It was what my computer should have been when I first plucked it from the box.

Need more reasons to try Easy Peasy on your Eee? I’ll give you nine, especially if you’re stuck with their version of Xandros. If you want to make it ten, leave a comment and make a suggestion.

9. Working Sound

The 701 model of the Eee PC had a strange issue where the sound would sometimes be barely audible. This was caused by Also turning down the output volume to an almost nothing. This required going into the terminal and using alsamixer to turn up the volume as the GUI volume interface didn’t make enough of a difference.

Easy Peasy fixes this problem. The volume is loud and crisp, even loud enough to the point I have a hard time listening to it on full volume.

8. New Interface

I admit that I am a sucker for a new interface, but Easy Peasy really takes it to the next level. Easy Peasy takes the simple interface from the default install, adds a slew of new features to it, and makes it pretty.

Many out there believe that the Eee PC can’t do attractive graphics and speed at the same time. Easy Peasy proves them wrong while also using innovative task management system navigation to put everything you need at your fingertips, something the default OS failed to do.

7. New Software

Forgetting the updated applications (more on that in a moment), Easy Peasy makes it, well, easy, to install new apps. In fact, it comes with new applications, including GIMP, Evolution, Transmission, Ekiga, a slew of new games and even a remote desktop viewer. Best of all, you have a real package manager that lets you install new applications without any hacking.

6. Battery Life

One of my initial gripes was that my battery life seemed to have dwindled to nearly nothing after about six months of usage, however, installing Easy Peasy seemed to be a shot in the arm for the system in that area. I won’t say that it has brought it back to where it was when I opened the box nor have I done a full test from a full charge to dead, but estimates by the OS indicate that I’m getting about 2 hours per charge, even with wifi on, and my rough math seems to jive with those numbers.

5. No Unnecessary Features

The Eee PC’s crowded keyboard is rough on any typist, but when added to taskbar app that lets you change to Chinese, even on accident, it becomes a nightmare. If you need that functionality, there is a way to add it, but if you don’t it doesn’t come by default. In fact, other than the usual caps and num lock indicator, nothing on the desktop alters your keyboard input.

Likewise, there’s no forced anti-virus application installed on the desktop and that helps to speed up boot times and keep the system running smoothly. After all, forcing an anti-virus on Linux is a bit like immunizing against the black plague. Sure, it might be a good idea, but is it really necessary?

4. Working Wifi

Out of the box, the default OS’ wifi didn’t support WPA, requiring a patch to fix the problem. Even after patched, I had to log into my wireless network every time I wanted to surf the Web, even though my password was supposedly stored. Even with vanilla Ubuntu, the wifi didn’t work correctly, requiring non-standard drivers.

With Easy Peasy, the wireless works out of the box and it remembers your passwords, logging you on every time you fire it up. It is that simple. You forget you even have an encrypted network.

3. A Better Distro

Though it sounds like a broad statement, Ubuntu is a better distro than the version of Xandros the Eee uses by default. It is better supported, has a much larger following, a bigger development community, more frequent updates and better financial backing. Though Easy Peasy itself is a somewhat backwater hack modification, the fact that it is built upon Ubuntu gives me piece of mind.

It’s at least better than being a backwater hack of Xandros.

2. Up To Date Software

If you have one of the old Xandros-based 701s, there’s a good chance you still have old versions of all your applications. New ones were painfully slow to come down the pipe from Asus and the system update software was a pain to use. Sure, there was a real package manager hidden away, but its repositories were limited so that, without installing unofficial apps, you would never have up to date software. This is both inconvenient and insecure.

Easy Peasy fixes that with regular updates, a real package management system and the latest software constantly available. No more using outdated versions of Firefox.

1. Faster

Computer speed is a very subjective thing and appearances can easily be deceiving. It is hard to do an A/B comparison without a second Eee PC of the same model and, even with such a comparison, it would meaningless without some heavy duty benchmarks. Still, Easy Peasy feels faster than the default install, especially when running the default OS in desktop mode.

There are many potential explanations for this, a newer, more refined distro, less stuff running in the background (no forced anti-virus, input modifier, etc.) or applications that are fully patched, but the OS seems to be faster running the various apps including both Firefox and OpenOffice.org.

Even running it with Pidgin IMing away in the background didn’t seem to slow it down. Easy Peasy is light on its toes, slightly edging out the default OS and beating the heck out of the regular install of Ubuntu.

Conclusions

The bottom line is pretty simple. THIS is how the Eee PC should have been shipped. With this OS, nearly all of my gripes and complaints about it would have been done away with. My only regret is that I didn’t do this on day one. Instead, I went to two countries and nearly a dozen conferences with the old OS and I am beating myself up.

I feel so stupid.

Since Easy Peasy is, obviously, GPL, I would really appreciate it if Asus would just make this the default OS for future Linux-based Eee PCs. Though the install isn’t bad, not to someone who’s familiar with installing Linux distros, I see no reason why I should spend hours downloading and installing an OS that could just come pre-packaged.

It’s time to right this wrong Asus and, if you’re an Eee PC user that is still on the default OS, it is time to take action. Every second with the default OS is a second wasted with an inferior laptop.

Don’t let another day go by without Easy Peasy on your Eee PC. I don’t usually do wholesale endorsements of products and I’ll admit that there are a few problems with it (microphone issues seem do be at the top of the chart and I also seem some graphical glitches) but when you compare the drawbacks to what is gained, there is no contest.

Easy Peasy is an truly lives up to it’s name, being one “easy peasy” choice to make.

  • http://ronuts.blogspot.com Ro

    I wish my experience with Easy Peasy on the Eee PC 901 had been so positive.

    Installation was, it is true, straightforward enough and is clearly seen as an experience worth repeating: the installation program restarts automatically with each restart of the PC. I only have to quit the program to start working but it's annoying nonetheless.

    I have the problem you mentioned with regard to the sound – I can barely hear it – and the F-keys for volume control do not seem to work reliably either. It can't see the built-in webcam. Oh, and there seems to be no easy way to find and connect to WiFi networks which rather defeats the purpose of this machine.

    It's a shame because I love my Eee and I would so prefer to use this Ubuntu-relative. Unfortunately, it does seem that this version still requires far too much knowledge of the workings of Linux behind the GUI.

    It makes me unhappy to say this but I think I'm going to have to restore the bundled Linux version, for all its faults. At least until the next version of Easy Peasy is released.

  • http://www.plagiarismtoday.com Jonathan Bailey

    Hm, that is odd. I have an Eee 701 and didn't have any of those problems. My wifi works better now with Easy Peasy, the sound has largely been fixed and all of the function keys work.

    It sounds to me as if maybe Easy Peasy has hardware issues with the 901 model. Perhaps I should qualify my recommendation for those with the 701 series, such as myself.

    Thank you very much for sharing this and I'll be sure to warn others when they ask me about it…

  • Brett

    I have an eeePC 4g and have had problems with skype and wireless access with the default Easy Peasy install. I managed to get skype working by unloading pulse and adding esound (thanks to some web surfing). But the wireless is still flakey. I have blacklisted IPv6 as is often suggested (without which i could not connect at all) but the network connectivity is very intermittent. I have both a 4G, a 1000 model, and have helped a 900 owner
    recently install a non-Xandros OS, and in using the old Ubuntu-eee 1.0, the rebranded Easy Peasy, and the newer Eeebuntu 2.0, I find that there is LOTS of variation in the support of the default install for certain models.
    Still soldiering away…

  • http://www.plagiarismtoday.com Jonathan Bailey

    That is interesting. I guess I should feel lucky that I have one of the better-supported models. No issues as of right now with wifi, it works better than with the default install, and Skype seems to work fine.

    I'll be sure to keep this in mind, thank you.

  • http://www.inelegantsolutions.com/2009/02/my-dark-linux-confession/ My Dark Linux Confession : Inelegant Solutions

    [...] issue, in cases where Linux is built around a specific computer, it does seem to work very well. Take my review of Easy Peasy. Though others on different versions of the Eee have had some serious problems, as indicated by the [...]

  • Mick

    Installation repeat – go to preferences – sessions – uncheck ubiquity – restart
    Sound -Right click on the sound icon on the task bar- recording tab – make sure the lineout sliders are completely open – slide to the top
    Webcam – F2 as startup screen begins – Bios setup – Advanced – onboard devices conf – enable onboard camera.
    WiFi – System – preferences-network conf – although my 901 found my network, all I needed was the WPA password
    I have installed Easy Peasy twice and after much searching for these fixes it seems to working fine. I went back to Xandros once but it really does not compete with Ubuntu . Hope this helps,
    Regards
    Mick

  • http://www.plagiarismtoday.com Jonathan Bailey

    Thanks for the fixes. For me and my Eee though Easy Peasy worked much better. I tried the Ubuntu install, it didn't go very well and was riddled with issues. It is likely just my older Eee though…

  • Tim

    I agree will all of the above. Easy Peasy 1.0 works great with my new Acer Aspire One that has 1GB RAM, 8GB SSD, 8GB SDHC, 1.6GHz Atom processor. Webcam works, WPA2 works great, Evolution is good, Network Manager works, Pidgin is great! Just turn off Ubiquity off as soon as you finish install to remove the annoying auto install

  • http://www.plagiarismtoday.com Jonathan Bailey

    Glad it's worked well for you!

  • NA

    I bought my EEE PC900 with Windows XP installed and I hated it. My Wifi connection would cut out every couple of minutes and everything was slow in general. I decided to download a Linux distro right after buying it cuz I've always had good experiences with Linux. I chose Easy Peasy kinda on a whim and I'm glad I did! It seems to have sped up everything and my wifi stays connected whenever I need. It seems to me that Easy Peasy was made to work with the EEEPC's hardware a lot better than XP.

  • NA

    I bought my EEE PC900 with Windows XP installed and I hated it. My Wifi connection would cut out every couple of minutes and everything was slow in general. I decided to download a Linux distro right after buying it cuz I've always had good experiences with Linux. I chose Easy Peasy kinda on a whim and I'm glad I did! It seems to have sped up everything and my wifi stays connected whenever I need. It seems to me that Easy Peasy was made to work with the EEEPC's hardware a lot better than XP.

  • mark

    this is rubbish

    on 900a the wireless does not work properly nor does the function keys, and the microphone has issues

    if by “unecessary features” you mean wireless access and sound

  • mark

    this is rubbish

    on 900a the wireless does not work properly nor does the function keys, and the microphone has issues

    if by “unecessary features” you mean wireless access and sound

  • houseman

    I’ve just ‘saved’ my 4G with Easy Peasy. I was having all sorts of problems with the keyboard. The CTRL key had never worked, but after about 12-18 months it it started to produce chinese characters. I worked my way round that and decided to put a start menu on, following various website tips. That was OK but then I found individual keys would start to initiate commands – e.g. every time I pressed ‘O’ a file open menu appeared, and so on.

    I tried other distributions, first Mint, off a USB key – not bad (I have it on my desktop and it’s brilliant) but I felt it was just too big for the eee. So then I went for it and installed EasyPeasy. Sad to say I had loads of difficulty, but always with the key board.

    I was on the point of giving up but decided that if EasyPeasy was having the same problems as eee’s original Xandos then there must be a hardware fault. I was on the point of buying a new keyboard but thought why not just see if it needs cleaning first.

    So I opened it up, dusted it down – there was a bit of unlikely stuff in there – and put it back together again. This time the EasyPeasy loaded up more easily but I was still getting a lot of difficulty with some keys on the password and keyring input screens.

    So I decided to reinstall it .. and it got better but there were still some screens showing this weird behaviour.

    I then read this could be got rid of by hard resetting by removing the battery. So I removed the battery, then I went out for a walk!

    On my return I put the battery back in, also connected up the power supply and switched on.

    And it worked, no problems (well, apart from the ones of my making, which I discovered eventually) and I now have a quite zippy, fully featured netbook with a wide range of software. Great.

    I have just one quibble (there has to be): most of the applications fill the whole screen but the top bar sits behind the status bar of the operating system, so that the off/minimise/maximise buttons (which I find to my surprise I actually like being on the left) are hidden and you have to close either by right clicking or by Alt-dragging the screen down below the status bar.

    There’s probably a neater way round that too. I really like th OS and I’m delighted to have my eee back and even more functional than when I first had it.

    Sorry about the length of the post but it’s been a very positive (and money-saving) experience for me!

  • Leif Bjorklund

    Great and works perfect for me except how can I
    use SD or USB to free more storage for the OS I can not update
    not enough memory limit 4Gb

  • Alan

    I agree 100% with this review, I have been running EasyPeasy on my Samsung netbook for over 6 months now and it’s great! It’s GUI is simple to use, quick, no worrying about getting infected and as much free excellent open source software as I want. Love it!

  • Patrick Ellis

    I’ve only had my netbook for about 3 months, and EasyPeasy has been exactly what I’ve been looking for on my single-core Atom N455-equipped Acer Aspire One D255E. I’ve tried all the usual suspects for netbooks: JoliOS, MeeGo, Ubuntu Netbook Remix, as well as standard distros including Ubuntu 11.04, Linux Mint, Fedora, etc. Some worked better than others, and some were absolutely horrible experiences, so I was still trying to find the sweet-spot. To be honest, I avoided using EasyPeasy for a while simply because of the admittedly lame name, but decided to finally give it a shot. I’m very glad I did! The UI is great for my netbook, it runs fast, all my hardware is supported (minus some mic issues which has been consistent across all Linux distros), and I can still customize the system as I would with an official Ubuntu distro. While this netbook shipped with Windows 7 Starter, I’ve actually got it dual-booting EasyPeasy and Windows XP and this seems like the best way to run the system. FYI, I do prefer Linux, but I’m only using Windows for legacy software support (unfortunately). Cheers!

  • GaryAber

    When I try your link in the sixth paragraph to Get Easy Peasy, I get a “warning page” that this is not a place I should be going. The page itself does not reference Avast or even WOT, but it is enough for me to abandon any idea of going to the home site let alone trying the OS on my netbook (with the factory installed Win 7 Starter). I guess I’ll stick with Natty. Maybe it’s just me. . . .