The Barrieluv Blog
(http://blog.hellokitty.com/barrieluv)
Barrieluv’s Minty Blog.

Archive for July, 2009

This Is A Test.

Friday, July 31st, 2009

This post is a test, just in case those nice people at support need one. :0)

Here’s a shot of the Morrissey gig at The Academy in Brixton.

Morrissey

More Meerkat Mishaps!

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Aleksandr and Sergei return in this hilarious compilation of bloopers!  Boy, these guys get funnier and funnier…

Picture Of The Day 6

Friday, July 24th, 2009

I spied a lion hiding in the bushes… not a real one, though!

Hidden lion.

Aleksandr Orlov’s First Ever Interview!

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

There is a new advert as well, but it’s not particularly good.  So here’s an interview with a reporter from The Scum newspaper.

Picture Of The Day 5

Monday, July 20th, 2009

I was out walking in some woodland when I took this shot of the sky through the trees.  After a bit of messing about with The Gimp image editor, I came up with this which looks like a hippy’s nighmare…

Like….heeavyyyy, man.

I’ve Moved!! Sort of…

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

I’m having some issues with this blog and until the support team get back to me, I’ve copied over the Eee Pc stuff from this blog over to my blogger account at http://barrieluv.blogspot.com/

So come on over and check it out! xx

Snes Games On The 900.

Friday, July 17th, 2009

First, create a folder and call it Snes Games or something similar.  Then you will need to download the games you want and put them into the folder you created.  Don’t unzip them.

Games are available, you just have to look in the right places.

Next, you’ll want some software to run them on. We’re going to use snes9express which can be found in the Synaptic package manager.

Installing snes9express in Synaptic.

Once that’s done, snes9expres will appear in the menu under Games.

Click it to start and then click the folder icon on the ROM tab to find your game.

Choose your game.

Then hit the Power button…

Hit the power button.

…Et voila!!

Street Fighter II

Next, you might want to add a controller.  This is where it gets confusing.

Here’s my controller:

Logitech Precision

It’s cheap, but it does the job.  All I need to do now is get it working!

Updating the BIOS On The 900

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

I’ve been having some problems with my 16GB drive recently and after much messing about I’ve reached the conclusion that I need a new one.

So I’ve had to reinstall Mint 7 (following my own guide for the 701) entirely on the 4GB drive which leaves me with 1.3GB free.

Now, one of the solutions I tried was to update the BIOS.  I’ve never done this before and I understand that if you make a mistake whilst doing it, you can be left with a very pretty Asus EeePC 900 doorstop.

Please, unless you really are confident of your ability to follow instructions to the letter or you are having problems which you know a BIOS update will solve, leave the BIOS alone.

This is how it’s done.

You will need a USB stick.  I used a generic 1GB drive, I wouldn’t recommend using anything over 4GB.  Plug it into the machine on the right hand side in the USB slot closest to you.  Make sure no other drives are attached.

Go to System > Administration > Partition Editor

Enter your password.

Once it’s finished scanning your drives, go to the drop down list at the top right and click on /dev/sdd.

Then right click the partition box > Unmount.

Right click it again > Format to FAT32

Click Apply.

When it’s done, right click again > Manage Flags and tick the Boot box.

When it’s done, you can close the partition editor and move on.

Let’s get the BIOS file!

Download the BIOS file from here (click on the little plus sign next to BIOS and then Download From Global) or from my SkyDrive.

Save it to a convenient place.  Right click the zip file and then ‘Extract Here’.  A file called 900-ASUS-1006.ROM will appear.

Rename it to 900.ROM  You MUST do this.  It will not work unless you do.

That is your BIOS file and you need to copy it to your USB stick.  It should be the only file on the stick.

Now, you’re sure you’ve got all of that?  Good.

This is the fun part.

Shutdown the Eee.

Make sure your Eee is attached to the mains AC power.

Make sure you have nothing attached to it (USB sticks, drives, SD cards) and hit the power button.

Now start up and hit F2 at the Asus screen to go into the BIOS.  Once in, go to (using the arrow keys) Boot > Boot Device Priority and make sure it looks like this:

1st boot device     Removable Dev.

2nd boot device   HDD:SM-ASUS-PHISON

3rd boot device    ATAPI CD Rom

Then hit ESC.

Now go to Boot Settings Configuration.  You need to make it look like this:

Quick Boot    Disabled

Quiet Boot     Disabled

To do this, use the arrow keys and the enter key.

When you’re done, hit ESC and then F10 and Enter.

Now shutdown.

Put your stick with the BIOS file into the left hand USB slot and start up the Eee.

At the Asus screen, hold down ALT and hit F2.

Some text will appear.  You won’t have anything to do now.  Just let it get on with what it needs to do.  It takes a few minutes.

DO NOT INTERRUPT IT!!

Only when you are prompted to do so, shutdown using the power button.

Picture Of The Day 4

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

This is yet another niece of mine, Rebecca, just seven months old and cute as a button!  Don’t worry, there’s only two more to go… :0)

Picture Of The Day 4

Babies! On Skates!!

Friday, July 10th, 2009

I don’t know if this is creepy or cute, but it is clever…