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  • Windows 7 on an IdeaPad S10e

    Mirco 19:01 on Monday, 26. October 2009 | View Comments Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , diskpart, driver, ideapad, installation, lenovo, , netbook, s10e, upgrade, , win7, , windows7

    Last week Microsoft introduced the new Windows 7 to the humble consumer and since I’ve known about the increased performance over Windows Vista from the Beta program it was to to send the installation of Windows XP on my netbook into retirement for good.

    The Atom processor of the S10e doesn’t support 64 Bit operating systems and the onboard graphic isn’t the fastest either. And since I rarely store any data directly on the netbook I won’t need the BitLocker feature, so I went for a solid 32 Bit Home Premium version. These are available as System Builder Version from 69€ to 89€ at retail shops (perfectly legal according to German law). The only differences to the regular retail version is the missing 64 Bit DVD and the lack of Microsoft support.

    The first obstacle was the DVD. The IdeaPad, like any netbook, doesn’t have an internal optical drive. So I have two options:

    1. use an external USB DVD drive
    2. copy the DVD onto a USB thumb drive (at least a 4GB size)

    I went with option 2 because I didn’t want to buy a new DVD drive.

    Before I started to copy I had to prepare the thumb drive using some command. Open the Command Prompt (CMD) as an Administrator (important!).

    c:>diskpart
    DISKPART>lis dis
    DISKPART>sel dis 3 (3 was my thumb drive)
    DISKPART>lis par
    DISKPART>sel par 1 (1 usually the only partition on the thumb drive)
    DISKPART>format fs=FAT32 LABEL=”Windows 7” QUICK OVERRIDE
    DISKPART>active
    DISKPART>exit

    Your thumb drive should now be empty and most importantly bootable.

    Now insert the Windows 7 DVD into your DVD drive (D:) on your PC and copy the content to the thumb drive (G:) using Robocopy. (use drive letters that match your configuration)

    c:>Robocopy d: g: *.* /e /copyall

    This could take a while, depending on the writing speed of your thumb drive. Now you can boot the netbook with the memory stick and start the installation process. I still had the original recovery partition which I wanted to keep. I had to choose custom setup to select the system partition for installation. The automatic mode went into a menu loop because the recovery partition (the first partition on the disk) was too small to install Windows 7. A simple error or warning message would have helped at this point.

    The main installation was done within 30 minutes.

    From good tradition the first thing I did was to run Windows Update. It found only 9 updates, most of which where device drivers. but still I missed some functionality.

    • Microphone
    • Bluetooth
    • Energiemanagement
    • Multi Touch function of the touchpad

    Lenovo doesn’t provide any Windows 7 drivers to the IdeaPad S10e, since the device is currently phasing out and is only sold with Windows XP. But the new IdeaPad S10-2 is sold with Windows 7 and besides some minor differences it’s practically the same hardware.

    Here’s a list of needed device drivers:

    For the 3G version of the S10e you’ll need additional UMTS card drivers. There’s a complete list of all working drivers and tools at the ThinkPad Forum (only German content, but the drivers are available in Englisch).

    Update: I just found a video tutorial

    Click here for Part 2

     
  • The Now! habit in IT

    Mirco 18:58 on Wednesday, 7. May 2008 | View Comments Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , communication server 2007, communicator, , habit, installation, , , now!, ocs, , planning

    Yesterday, 15:30 at the office of my current customer.

    IM: “Could install the Communication Server today?”

    What?

    OK, we had made the required preparations on the Active Directory, but haven’t done any planing on how or where to place the servers. All I knew for certain at this point was that we had to install the enterprise version of Office Communication Server 2007 due to the amount of users.

    So we ended up with four people installing the server on a virtual machine. After we ran the Schema, Forest and Domain prep tools we started installing the server, the database on a separate machine and started the service.

    Everything seemed OK so far.

    When we tried to test a client we could log on. The Eventlog indicated that the server name couldn’t be resolved by the DNS.

    That’s why I love proper planning.

    I remembered we had to add some SRV records to the DNS. So we looked through the installation manual and added some _sipinternaltls _tcp SRV records to each domain in the forest.

    Next problem: The certificate could not be verified.

    We couldn’t find any problem with the certificate, and tried some different options in the creation wizard. But still couldn’t log on.

    After checking through all the logs on the client and the servers, we came to the conclusion this had to be a database problem, and since it already was 21:00 we called it quits for the day.

    Today:

    According to the error on the database server the service use of the OCS couldn’t perform write operations, but it had all the necessary permissions. After searching he net we found a KB article on the Microsoft website indicating we should install a patch, available through the support hotline (there wasn’t even a download on the premiere support site).

    Well the patch worked fine on the OCS but failed on the SQL server, because it had more than one database instance.

    So we moved the database to another server with a single instance.

    And it finally worked… after 24h.

    All of this trouble because management all of a sudden decided it had to start mass rollout of the Office Communicator next week.

     
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