MSI Wind still here… OSX, Crunchbang, & Windows 7
Filed under: Hardware, Projects, Software, Two Thumbs Up
SO… I did not take back the MSI Wind. My friend Jed and my wife talked me out of it. Jed’s argument was “Why?”. Then my wife said, “It’s only 350 bux”.
I decided to play with it some more and install some OS’s on it…..
OSX:
First I played with OSX on the wind. First, I did the boot-132 method and installed a fresh copy of OSX. This went well. After the initial install, I needed to install some kexts to get the keyboard and mouse working. I used OSX86Tools to install them. I then did a full update from the Apple Software Update. This went well. I had some intermittent issues with the wifi and the webcam. All in all it was not so bad.
I next tried the MSIWindOS86.iso. (this is the pre-built ISO for the wind that’s available out there) It installed smoothly and everything but wifi was working immediately. I installed this with the kernel option unchecked and was able to again update the system to 10.5.6 from the apple update.
This was the extent of my getting OSX on the MSI Wind for now. I plan to attempt a more extensive install and get everything working soon. I will post a write up on this when I get to it.
Crunchbang Linux:
On a recommendation from Jed, I next installed Crunchbang Linux. This is a lightweight spin of Ubuntu that seems to work well with netbook systems. Everything went well with the install. Someone has compiled an Ubuntu/Debian package for the wifi adapter in the MSI Wind and this downloaded and installed beautifully. Well, slightly…
At first the wifi did not come up properly in the network manager. After some reading, I figured out I had to turn the bugger on. LOL Fn+F11 does this. When successful, a light with a wifi symbol will light up on the front of the MSI Wind. Another note, Fn+F6 controls the webcam on/off.
Another technochubby moment occured when I plugged in my USBConnect881 from AT&T (cellular internet usb device). Crunchbang immediately detected it and asked if I wanted it configured for use. I clicked yes and it set it all up for me. I tested it and it worked beautifully.
Again, this is the extent of what I did to get Crunchbang Linux on the device. I may go back to trying it again, if I do, I will post an extensive write up on this.
Windows 7:
I have a copy of the upcoming Windows 7 release. I decided to give this a go. This was by far the most painless of the 3 installs. Basically did the default install, then did the windows update. Everything worked, no issues with any device drivers. There was some issues with the AT&T dongle…
To test out the AT&T dongle, I first downloaded and installed the AT&T Communications manager from the AT&T website directly. I launched it with the USBConnect881 plugged in and Windows 7 complained about being unable to install the device driver for it. The Communications Manager program timed out and could not initialize the device.
I then went directly to the sierra wireless site and downloaded the generic 3G watcher. I uninstalled the AT&T Communications Manager and installed the 3G Watcher. I launched the application and plugged in the USBConnect881 dongle. The dongle then loaded the install for the Communications Manager and the 3G Watcher did not see the modem. In the 3G Watcher’s menu under tools, there is a mode setting, I set this to modem. Windows 7 then loaded the appropriate driver and the 3G Watcher initialized. After hitting ‘connect’ I was able to surf the web with the dongle. Good stuff.
So that’s about it for now. I really want to get Mac OSX running well on this thing, so I will be playing with this over the next couple of days.

