How boot Iconia W3 from pendrive (boot manager or linux distro)?

apostata
apostata Member Posts: 2 New User

Answers

  • apostata
    apostata Member Posts: 2 New User

    Good solution for boot pendrive Iconia W3. Difficult  boot UEFI, GPT & 32 bit computer

     

     

    http://liliputing.com/2013/10/booting-ubuntu-asus-transformer-book-
    t100.html

     

    http://it-stuff-i-needed.blogspot.com.es/2013/05/my-progress-on-
    installing-ubuntulinux.html

     

    http://www.rodsbooks.com/refind/

  • padgett
    padgett ACE Posts: 4,532 Pathfinder

    Have you done this with a W3 ? I have tried a few times and the limitation has always been that no Linux UEFI install has had 32 bit drivers.

     

    The first article listed contains this:

    "The Asus Transformer Book is a tablet/notebook device with a 10 inch touchscreen display, a keyboard and touchpad, and an Intel Atom Z3740 Bay Trail processor"

    ...

    "Download ubuntu-13.04-desktop-amd64.iso"

     

    The difference is the memory channel of the Z2760 (W3, W510) is 32 bit. However the while the Z3740D is also 32 bit, the Z3740 (no "D") is 64 bit. This means the W4 "may" be able to run 64 bit O/Ss with some caveats. The biggest is that Intel may not yet have produced the necessary power manager and video drivers for a 64 bit Win 8.1 or anything else. This means that even if you could boot a W4 with a 64 bit O/S then it MAY be limited to 1.3 GHz, 800x600 resolution, no touch, wireless, or bluetooth. It also MAY overheat.

     

    When I get a z3740 device it is something I intend to test but am waiting for an 8" tab. That it can work with a T100 is hopefull though.

     

    Have seen in the media that "software issues" are holding up 64 bit Bay Trail tabs. I suspect it is Intel.

     

    "I was able to take Ubuntu 13.04 Linux for a spin on the Asus Transformer Book T100. At this point, bunch of key features don’t work yet, including WiFi or touchscreen support — and the screen resolution is stuck at 800 x 600 pixels."

     

     

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,932 Trailblazer

    I haven't tried with a W3, but I have Mint running in an Oracle Virtualbox on my W700. That's going to be a lot simpler than trying to run native.

    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • padgett
    padgett ACE Posts: 4,532 Pathfinder

    Guys, the W700 has a fan for cooling. W3 and W510 (& expect W4 will be same same) do not and need the thermal management software to prevent overheating. If you install something that does not have I suspect you will either be stuck in low gear or have local overheat issues, or both.

     

    Eventually other OSs (mainly Linux) will have the drivers. If not, best have a fan or cold plate available.

     

    Might use a few of these and an aluminum plate. About 450 btu/hr ea. ideally.

     

     

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,932 Trailblazer

    When running in a Virtualbox Windows is still up so there are no fan issues with the W700.

    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • padgett
    padgett ACE Posts: 4,532 Pathfinder

    Agree a virtual machine should able to run on top of the Windows drivers but the problem is that you need to allocate Ram to each instance. With only 2GB to start and considering that WIndows base uses about half of that, it is not much. Possible but when swapping starts everything slows down.

     

    4GB makes it a lot easier but Clover Trail does not support. Bay Trail (other than the "D" version) does support 4 GB the question is whether expansion will be possible.

     

    Can say that in normal circumstanses my Core I5 laptop with Win 7 enterprise, max a-v, office, and FDE is running about 1.7 GB nominally.

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