This is about compatibility of the LG P310 Tarsia with Linux (for a prospective buyer who is not sure whether he can run Linux on it). I've used openSUSE 11.1 with KDE 3.5 and so far it works fine.
This guide is intended to provide you details on how well this laptop works with Linux and which modules you need to configure. For details on how to actually install and configure the required modules have a look at our guides section for distribution specific instructions.
However, I couldn't manage to get ad-hoc in master mode to work.
Bluetooth
Yes
Seems to work, it could recognize my mobile, but I didn't try to connect.
USB
Yes
Card Reader
Not Tested
Webcam
Yes
Works perfectly in skype.
HDMI
Not Tested
VGA Output
Yes
Dual Screen/TwinView etc. works (only tested with nvidia driver)
Microphone
Yes
I had to change some settings in the kmixer until it worked.
S-Link
No
I couldn't get it to work. This is a special USB smart link made up by LG electronics. It might be useful for transferring data, but it looks like its a windows only thing (drivers).
Suspend to RAM
Yes
Screen brightness is changed (full brightness) after resume, but can be set to your preference again with one or two key presses.
Suspend to DISK
Yes
After resume, I had to restart the network though (was an easy task using YAST and its runlevel editor). Screen brightness is changed (full brightness) after resume, but can be set to your preference again with one or two key presses.
Volume Keys
Yes
The special keys for changing volume which are at the side of the notebook work fine as well.
The key combination Fn+F11 for silent mode works perfectly as well. It gets calm and CPU max frequency is set to 800MHz (same in Windows). Fn+F9 for Mute audio works, too. But Fn+F6 for disabling WLAN does not work, but using the network manager for disabling WLAN works (at least WLAN stops, the light for WLAN turns off and energy consumption becomes less/expected battery runtime increases noticeable).
Running same machine with Ubuntu 9.04, card reader works.
Alex., Thursday 22 of October, 2009 [13:04:05]
Hey there, using P310-Camini on Ubuntu 9.04. The most of all features are working quite good instantly after installation. To use all features of the NVIDA Card and for automatic frequency changes of the GPU i installed the proprietary drivers - works great since there.
But 1 Problem I DO have: sound is working on ubuntu only using the internal speakers. I did not get the sound working through plugged in earphones :(
Any Solution for that? I played a lot with the sound-mixer settings but nothing worked.
Alex, Sunday 13 of December, 2009 [07:28:12]
Hey Alex,
I encountered the same problem with a plug in speakers. Its muted by default run alsamixer and under headphone unmute (press m), this should do the trick.
ninjafury, Saturday 05 of September, 2009 [20:35:21]
To get everything working with no problems (including suspend/resume), you need a distro running kernel 2.6.31.
right now afaik, only sidux and opensuse 11.2 use that kernel.
ninjafury, Saturday 05 of September, 2009 [20:37:42]
Discussion
Running same machine with Ubuntu 9.04, card reader works.
Hey there,
using P310-Camini on Ubuntu 9.04. The most of all features are working quite good instantly after installation. To use all features of the NVIDA Card and for automatic frequency changes of the GPU i installed the proprietary drivers - works great since there.
But 1 Problem I DO have: sound is working on ubuntu only using the internal speakers. I did not get the sound working through plugged in earphones :(
Any Solution for that? I played a lot with the sound-mixer settings but nothing worked.
Hey Alex,
I encountered the same problem with a plug in speakers. Its muted by default run alsamixer and under headphone unmute (press m), this should do the trick.
To get everything working with no problems (including suspend/resume), you need a distro running kernel 2.6.31.
right now afaik, only sidux and opensuse 11.2 use that kernel.
Also you need the latest NVIDIA proprietary drivers from http://www.nvidia.com/object/unix.html