It’s been nearly six months since the arrival of the eeePC, and while there have been options to replace the default Xandros OS (baby mode) with another distro for nearly as long, none come close to the latest release of Mandriva ‘One’ 2008.1 (KDE). The latest iteration of Mandriva has only been out a day, but news that it would work without any configuration (i.e., ‘out of the box’) has been around since late February/early March.
Claiming to work without any config and actually doing so are two very different beasts however (as a number of failed distros will attest to); but when the folks at Mandriva state this capability then one is wise to take notice. And indeed the Mandriva 2008.1 delivers, and in grand fashion; booting up the live CD from an external usb CD drive attached to the eeePC loads the desktop in a very short time, and with the odd desktop resolution on the 7″ screen perfectly displayed.
Installation itself is an equally speedy affair, with the installer doing its initial work in around eight minutes, dividing up / and /home into 2.4GB and 1.2GB slices respectively; following installation one removes the live media (and in this case the cd drive) and is asked upon reboot to offer a root password, a name/user name/password before finding oneself in the newly installed system.
Everything does indeed work as advertised ‘out of the box’, from wireless (identified as Atheros 5006, though it is in fact 5007) to webcam to all of the fn + Fx keys (volume up/down, wireless on/off, etc.); Mandriva 2008.1 ‘One’ goes the Xandros one better in the suspend/hibernate category by not losing the wifi connection upon sleep, a small detail but nice nonetheless. Another big improvement is the use of PulseAudio, in this case with driving a large external monitor/TV; while the Xandros system provides a tinny sound at very limited volume, the Mandriva system really cranks out clear loud sound, making one fear for the tiny eeePC built-in speakers, and in the case of the external monitor/TV one has to actually reduce the sound on the external device itself, while in the Xandros system maxing the sound on it allows one to hear the action (unless someone nearby is crunching on some popcorn, slurping a drink, or humming).
Whatever you use the eeePC for, be it as an alternate lightweight notepad, wifi browser, or media centre for a larger external monitor/TV, Mandriva 2008.1 has made it significantly better, to the point that you will be wondering if they somehow packed a hardware upgrade in that tiny 697MB CD in addition to the excellent system on offer. If you have an eeePC and are tired of the limitations put on it by the default system, then this is a highly recommended choice: effortless to install and several upgrades that bring even more out of this little appliance.