Writing Tux
TuxMobil: Linux with Laptops, Notebooks, PDAs, Mobile Phones and Portable Computers - -> Linux Mobile Guide

Linux on the Road

Linux with Laptops, Notebooks, PDAs, Mobile Phones and Other Portable Devices

Werner Heuser

Version 3.15

Copyright (c) 2000-2004 Werner Heuser. For all chapters except "Lectures, Presentations, Animations and Slideshows" permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the Invariant Sections being "Preface" and "Credits", with the Front-Cover Texts being "Linux on the Road - the First Book on Mobile Linux", and with the Back-Cover Texts being the section "About the Author". A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License".

2004-09-20

Revision History
Revision 3.152004-09-20wh
the installation section has got new chapters about installation from an USB device, installation via VNC and installation via network interface, bibliography section updated, new chapter about in-built readers for SD/MMC cards and memory sticks, a link to laptop-mode was made, linked to the Gnome Palm Environment - GPE and to PocketWorkStation Linux distribution for PDAs, new chapter about how to use an universal USB port replicator, added section "Common Problems During Installation" (display problems, missing lines), document source bumped to DocBook XML V4.2, revision history converted to TLDP standards (partly), some XSL stylesheet changes, minor changes

Abstract

Mobile computer devices (laptops, notebooks, PDAs, mobile cell phones, portable audio and video players, digital cameras, calculators, wearables, ...) are different from desktop/tower computers. They use certain hardware such as PCMCIA cards, infrared and BlueTooth ports, wireless LAN, LCD displays, batteries, docking stations. Hardware parts cannot be changed as easily as in a desktops, e.g. the graphic card. Often their hardware is more limited (e.g. disk space, CPU speed). Though the performance gap to desktops is becoming smaller, e.g. in many instances, laptops or notebooks can become a desktop replacement.

Hardware support for Linux (and other operating systems) and mobile computer devices is sometimes more limited (e.g. graphic chips, internal modems). They often use specialized hardware, hence finding a driver can be more difficult. Many times they are used in changing environments, so there is a need for multiple configurations and additional security strategies.

Though there are laptop, notebook, PDA and mobile phone related HOWTOs available already, this guide contains a concise survey of documents related to mobile computer devices. Also Linux features, such as installation methods for laptops, notebooks and PDAs as well as configurations for different (network) environments are described.

And though some caveats Linux is a better choice for mobile computer devices, than most other operating systems. Because it supports numerous installation methods, works in many heterogenoues environments and needs smaller resources.