<div>Folks:</div>
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<div>I've put my test results for my three USB ethernet dongles up on the 10.1.3 wiki page. They all work, all the time. They are also very robust, I can interchange them on the fly plugged directly into the same USB port on either flavour of XO, and after a couple of seconds full internet connectivity is present.</div>
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<div>They all also work when individually plugged into a Belkin F5U237 Powered hub which is then plugged into either XO. The USB ID of the hub is 050d:0237. On that hub at the same time were an LG DVD drive (152e:1640), an external HD (00dc4:00db), all of which worked beautifully concurrently. (We chose this hub because James and Richard warned me about bad things happening when back-current is present from USB powered dvices, and Mikus has kindly verified for me that this hub behaves nicely in that respect.)</div>
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<div>On the USB2VGA testing, that continues. I've found that on the gnome screens using the preference drop-down gnome-display-prperties allows one to change the resolution on the fly, and also have the last used resolution saved for next reboot; and, it also keeps all the resolutions available for future change. I have not been successful changing resolutions on the sugar side. But, I havent spent much time yet on this yet. <tick tick tick></div>
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<div>Warning *noise alert* : when using the system-config-display command instead to change resolutions downwards, it appears to delete a whole bunch of previously available higher resolutions on the next reboot. It also requires a reboot (or maybe just an X restart, which i dont know how to do, sorry). This is a bit of a non-issue, as I probably should never have loaded this last rpm at all, and it has probably done something to the xorg.conf file. It was something I used on the Ubuntu box, and was just playing. As I understand it, which is sometimes a feat in itself, I may have defeated all the nice benefits of a configuration-less sisusb environment :-) I'm also still educating myself on the xrandr command, so I cannot be an authorative source for any of this. As i said, this whole paragraph is potentially *noise*. </div>
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<div>I didnt see any little section to put the more valuable part of this info up on the testing page, so I sent it here.</div>
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<div>Cheers</div>
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<div>KG</div>
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