Taking the XO for a spin turned out to be pretty easy and I have been able to add all of the applications I've wanted so far. I mentioned in my last post about the XO that I wanted to use it for programming and web browsing so I had a few requirements in mind. The laptop comes preinstalled with a custom web browser and Python but I often like to program in C and C++ so I wanted to install gcc. The web browser has a few wrinkles too, in the development build I tested I wasn't able to get some flash plugins to load (could be the version of flash or the fact that the XO version I downloaded wasn't a production release). The browser is tabless and it is a bit difficult (though not impossible) to figure out where downloaded files are stored. In short it wasn't quite was I've grown accustomed to, so I thought I would try installing Firefox. He's my step by step instructions for trying out the XO Laptop virtually and customizing it.
I began with the XO's wiki and found out that there are instructions for emulating the XO and VMWare virtual machine images for recent builds of the system. VMWare is a program which creates a simulated computer that runs within your current operating system. For the past few years I've tested all of the Linux distributions I've considered on VMWare Server (free to download and use at home). Once I started VMWare, I opened the
ship.2-OLPC-655.vmx
file and started it up.After the initial configuration, I wanted to add gcc, a collection of open source compilers. I thought it was going to involve downloading several RPM files, but I found out about a tool called yum which manages RPM packages. This is similar to Ubuntu's apt-get. As root I was able to run
yum install gccand it downloaded and installed all prerequisites.
Next I wanted to install Firefox, and to download it I thought I would try Lynx (a text based web browser). Installing Lynx was just as easy, as root I ran:
yum install lynxI ran
lynx www.google.com
and searched for firefox and downloaded the tar.gz
Linux version. After downloading I unpacked the archive using tar zxvf firefox-2.0.0.11.tar.gzI tried running firefox, but got an error about a missing shared object library. Yum was able to find this as well. One final time as root, I ran
yum install libstdc++.so.5After installing the C++ library, firefox ran just fine. The menus and graphics in Firefox matched the XO's theme, which I thought was pretty nifty. I was also able to install Flash. Well there you have it, why not take it for a test drive yourself.
4 comments:
I am a real newbie to Linux. I tried to do what you said on the SDHC card, with no luck. So I did it at root (used su -l) first. I didn't get any errors and there are a ton of directories and files.
But, how do I run firefox? Typing firefox in several locations doesn't seem to do it.
Hi Ross,
I'm not sure if I know where the problem is, but the following explanation might help.
When I unpacked the firefox tar file, I was in my home directory, so when I want to run firefox I use:
/home/olpc/firefox/firefox
If you want to be able to just type
firefox
on the command line, then the firefox executable file needs to be in a directory that is included in the $PATH environment variable. To see which directories are in PATH you can do
echo $PATH
You could change the PATH if you want. This post is already a bit long :) so I'll hold off... Would you be interested in editing the path?
Thanks for the help.
/root/firefox/firefox works for me. I am still fussing with the Flash plugin though (and lots of other things)
When I installed Flash, I think I just used the plugin installer within firefox.
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