I would not say that.(and I have to admit I was veeery close to ask for a powerbook because everything is really working out of the box!)
Looking back it was of easy, of course, but when I actually did the install it was hell :-) The hardest part of all is the boot scheme on ppc. I have not understood up to now how exactly this OpenFirmware stuff works. But AFAIR all the information that was needed for a successful install can be found in the Gentoo PPC Handbook.pau wrote:Did you find it difficult to install gentoo on your laptop? I don't have any experience witi ibooks or powerbooks, but sounds promising...
Code: Select all
Problem description
There seem to be two different occurances of the problem (or two different problems).
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acceleration problem:
The Thinkpad Fan accelerates in regular intervals, making an annoying noise.
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always on problem:
The Fan is always on, even though the processor is rather cool.
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Affected Models
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acceleration problem:
* Thinkpad T40, T40p, T41, T42(?)
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always on problem:
* Thinkpad T40, T40p, T41, T41p, T42, T42p, T43, T43p
* Thinkpad R32, R50, R50p, R51, R52
* Thinkpad X40 As I already said I have not yet quite understood, what exactly I have done :-( It is just different from x86 machines, where you have a boot sector and so on. AFAIR the boot sector on ppc in fact was a boot partition that had to be of a certain size and that had to be created with mac-fdisk or at least had to be kept from the previous OSX installation... Take a look at the Gentoo PPC Handbook, Installation.What's on with the boot scheme?
I _think_ I read in some Apple advetisement that the iBook was so quiet, because it was entirely passively cooled. But I am not sure whether they really meant the iBook G4 or if it was really in an Apple ad. When I got the iBook, however, I was so impressed by the flashy Mac OS X, I used it for about one and a half month (before finding out that it was really unusable for somebody with a freedom-of-choice-background) and I am quite sure that the fan never started, because when I heard it the first time using Linux, I really believed that I had broken the harddisk! Maybe it is a featrue kept hidden by Apple to sepparate the two notebook lines (Powerbooks/iBooks) more clearly. They do the same with video out: The PB can use the video out as a fully-featured second monitor, the iBook can (unpatched) only mirror from the LCD to the video out. Same goes for closed lid operation. Apple proclaims this as a PB exclusive feature, although the iBook can be put to closed lid operation as well.Can you please elaborate a bit more on the fan? You said it's working from time to time when you're running linux but that they seem not to exist on MacOSx