Eee Pc 701sd Operating System

Download drivers for ASUS Eee PC 701SD/XP. Drivers are compatible with Windows 7 / Windows XP operating systems. 5 Responses to How to install Google Chrome OS on an Asus Eee PC 701. Dan says: at 4:42 pm. Did you ever find a fix for the resolution issues?
Installation Step 1: Get to get it on a USB flash drive that is at least 4GBs big. Also, if you’re on Twitter who made this helpful build for us all. Step 2: Plug the USB flash drive into your Asus Eee PC and make sure that if you had an SD card in the SD card slot that it is removed. Boot up your Eee PC while holding down the Esc key. Choose your flash drive as the boot drive.
Fifa 14 Button Data Setup Keyboard more. Step 3: You should get a Chrome OS login screen. Login with username and password “facepunch.” Step 4: Make sure everything works and that you can connect to WiFi or via Ethernet.
Step 5: Hit Ctrl+Alt+T on your keyboard to open a terminal window. Step 6: Run the following command: /usr/sbin/chromeos-install You will be prompted for your password twice.
Each time it is facepunch. Once the install completes (takes about 20 minutes) a message will show up in the terminal saying: “Installation to ‘/dev/sda’ complete. Please shutdown, remove the USB device, cross your fingers, and reboot.
Step 7: Shutdown (hit the power button), remove the USB device, cross your fingers, and reboot. Step 8: With any luck it will boot up and you’ll be prompted for your login and password. Both are still ‘facepunch’. This just worked for me. Now to figure out how to change the default password and get it to recognize my Google Apps account rather than a regular Google account UPDATE: Post-installation security After you’ve successfully installed Chrome OS to your Asus Eee PC (or any other flash-drive powered computer for that matter using the above steps), you’ll probably want to change the default local password from the shared-by-everyone who used Hexxeh’s image default of facepunch. To do so, hit Ctrl + Alt + T to open up a terminal, then execute the following commands: sudo mount -o remount / You will be prompted for a password; enter facepunch. Then enter the following: sudo passwd root You will be prompted Enter new UNIX password: followed by Retype new UNIX password: and assuming that the two passwords matched correctly, you’ll receive a success message of passwd: password updated successfully.
At this point your installation should be quite a bit more secure so that if you lose your Asus Eee PC, no one will be able to easily crack the install to get at your other passwords. ANOTHER UPDATE: Only a few issues so far that.
As mentioned in, I would install Windows XP onto it since a few of the programs that I wanted to use (actually it was mainly 1 program) would not work under Linux. One of the functions that I wanted for this netbook was to be able to connect to my Slingbox.
Pinko The Pink Panther Game on this page. Installing Windows XP onto it was the easiest solution since Sling Media has SlingPlayer for Windows. During my research, I did find some instructions on how to get SlingPlayer to work under Linux but with the other Windows programs that I wanted to run, the easiest solution would be to install Windows XP onto it.
The first thing that I did even when I was running the preinstalled & customized Xandros Linux was that I upgraded the memory from 512MB to 2GB. The next thing that I did was to download all the Windows XP drivers from the ASUS support website. I also downloaded/updated the firmware on the ASUS Eee PC 701SD. There are ways to install Windows XP using a USB memory stick but since I had my Windows XP Home DVD and I also had a portable DVD/CD drive (see my review on this ), I opted to do it the easy way and just install Windows XP from DVD. I connected my portable DVD drive to one of the available USB ports on the netbook and booted it.
I then selected the option of deleting the existing partitions and used the entire 8GB SSD drive for the installation of Windows XP. Windows XP installed without any issues. After the netbook rebooted, I ran each of the executable files from each of the driver files (since my Windows XP DVD did not have all the necessary drivers). After each driver installation, I rebooted the netbook. At the end, I had installed all the drivers and they all seemed to work. During the installation of Windows XP because the netbook had 2GB of RAM, the virtual memory paging file was automatically set to 3GB (1.5 times the amount of RAM on the netbook). This left me with less than half of the 8GB SSD drive for my other applications.