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10 KiB
Plaintext
122 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3527
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Title: HPR3527: My gEeeky Experiment - Part 3
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3527/hpr3527.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 00:59:25
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio Episode 3527 for Tuesday 8th of February 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, My Geelyacure Experiment Part 3, It is hosted by Claudio Miranda,
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and is about 14 minutes long, and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Claudio talks about how he upgraded the SSD on his ASUS CPC 901 network.
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Hello Haka Public Radio, this is Claudio Miranda, wishing you a happy new year on this first
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recording of mine for 2022, and my third in this series, My Geelyac Experiment, where I
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talked about how I did stuff to my ASUS EPC 901 network.
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If you want to catch Part 1, that would be Episode 3383, and Part 2 is Episode 3418.
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Now, there are a bunch of links that go with this episode, but I've gone ahead and just
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linked to my blog post about this, which has all the necessary links there, so that way I don't
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fill up the show notes too much. Everything is just one location, so just check out the blog post
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for more details on everything. So, this one I'm going to talk about how I upgraded the SSD
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on the 901. Now, this particular network has the 4GB plus 16GB configuration, where the primary SSD
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is 4GB, and the secondary is the more accessible 16GB, which is under the network itself,
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and if you just remove the cover there, you should be able to get to it easily.
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So, I've been running OpenBSD current on this, and at the time, I decided to update to a
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newer snapshot of OpenBSD current, so I went through the process, restarted, and after
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it had completed the upgrade, and restarted again, I noticed that the system was complaining
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that the root partition was full, which I thought was rather odd, though not too odd,
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because I did kind of, I was kind of close to the edge there, so I had to remove some software,
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but this was just ridiculous, because I hadn't installed anything else.
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So, after it had finished restarting, I decided to do a DF-H on the root partition,
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which is where I had the, the root partition was on the 4GB SSD, and my home was on the 16GB.
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I noticed that it complained that I was completely out of space,
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but in such a way that I was actually, I was actually missing space from the SSD,
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it actually was saying that, it was saying that I only had 3.6GB of space,
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and that I was over capacity at 103%. So, the only way that this could be possible
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is that the 4GB SSD was starting to fail, so it was either replaced, put everything on the 16GB,
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and just completely ignore the 4GB partition, but then I'd have even less space than I had before.
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So, this is when I said to myself, I'm going to have to see what upgrade options there are
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for this netbook, because 16GB is just not going to be enough.
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So, I started going on the net, I looked in Amazon, a few other places, eBay,
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to see if I could find something that was compatible with this, and the only ones that I saw were
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at about 64GB at most, and they were way too expensive. So, I was like, no, there's got to be
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something else out there, and so, I started searching again for SSDs that would be compatible with
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the EPC 901, and I did come across a bunch of them, which at first was great, but then when
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I started looking at them, they said that it was compatible with the 901, a few other netbooks,
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but that was, I was a little suspicious, it just seems, when something seems too good to be
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true usually as well, that was the case here. So, I decided to go ahead and do some research,
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and doing that, I actually came across some very useful information.
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In the blog post that I'll be putting the show notes, I linked to another blog where this person
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was trying to do the exact same thing, and he went ahead and he ordered an M-SATA drive, an M-SATA
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SSD for his netbook, and it seemed to fit just fine, everything, he went ahead, was able to install it,
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however, in the comment section, he does know that the netbook did not detect it, and would not
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boot from it. Fortunately, another person replied to his comment stating that the M-SATA SSDs that
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you see online, they may be advertised to work, but they won't work. The thing is that the connector
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on the EPC 901 is a mini PCIe connector slot, and it has to take a mini PCIe drive.
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The connectors, if you look at them on an M-SATA SSD and a mini PCIe one, they look the same,
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they have the same number of pins and everything, but the problem is that they're wired differently,
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so that's what that one person who replied to the author had stated, so he recommended getting
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an M-M mini PCIe to M-SATA adapter. One other thing that I came to realize is that
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it's not a SATA interface at all, it's actually a parallel ATA interface, it's some weird
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custom thing that ASUS did with these netbooks, so I said okay, thankfully I didn't purchase anything,
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now that I have this information I can go ahead and do some searching, so I went ahead and I
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looked at Amazon with a few other places, and I finally went with a 3x5 cm SATA adapter,
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to 3x7 cm mini PCIe SATA SSD for ASUS, it was the adapter for an M-SATA card, M-SATA SSD,
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cost me about $7 US, and then I purchased an M-SATA, it's advertised as an M-SATA mini PCIe 120GB,
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128GB SSD, so you gotta be careful with some of these vendors, so yeah, I went ahead and I bought
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this, had good reviews, cost me $25 US, so in total I spent a little over 30 bucks,
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so not too bad, not too bad, to upgrade from the 16GB secondary to the 120GB on this netbook,
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so I ordered this, and when it arrives I went ahead and I cracked open my SSD, my SSD,
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my EPC netbook, and I went ahead and I installed the M-SATA drive on the adapter, and the adapter
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onto the mini PCIe slot on the E, closed everything up, crossed my fingers, and turned it on,
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lo and behold, the ASUS EPC detected the drive with the adapter, the only thing, the only
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weird thing was that, because that accessible slot under the netbook is the secondary,
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it's gonna be detected as the secondary, so what happens is when you turn it on, it complains
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that there's no primary because this, what I notice is that with this adapter, it actually
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disables the primary drive, so you have to hit F1 in order to boot from the secondary,
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I searched online to see if there was some sort of BIOS update or something that would bypass that,
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but there is none, so it's just a matter of hitting F1 when the netbook posts, but aside from that,
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it actually boots from it, I was able to install a snapshot of OpenBSD on it,
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and yeah, I backed up all my files before doing anything, before replacing everything,
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and then once the system was installed, I just created, I believe I created just one large partition
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on the SSD, I don't remember if I split it, regardless, I had the entire operating system plus
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my home directory on that new SSD, I was trying to see if there was a way to maybe trick it,
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but yeah, I just have to deal with the F1. Anyway, so I did that, and I didn't notice
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quite a speed boost, I mean, for what it is, I noticed quite a speed boost compared to the original
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SSD, that's because the original SSD's right speed is very, very slow compared to this one,
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and this is a cheap Chinese branded SSD, but was more than sufficient for what I was going to do
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with this, and so far it's been working fine. I did decide to open up the netbook to find out
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if maybe I could go ahead and install the SSD onto the primary slot to avoid the F1,
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but what I did come to, I did come to realize something, the internal SSD that they would just say
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is internal for the primary, I assumed was soldered, apparently it's not, it is on a slot, so you
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can remove it, but the problem is that it is a half height SSD, so the one that I purchased would
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not fit, the only thing I'd probably have to do, and I did search on Amazon and eBay for this,
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is get an extender cable and try and fish that all the way to the other side, but at this point,
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it's not something that I may invest money on to get done. For now, hitting F1 at post is fine,
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it's something I've been just doing every time at this point, but otherwise it's been working great
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with this adapter, and the speed has improved quite a bit on this to the point where I can actually
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run Chromium on this netbook while SSDH to wherever in a terminal, and I have two tabs in Chromium,
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and it's pretty usable, it's more usable than it was previously, but it's pretty quickly for what
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it is, and I have to say I'm very happy with it. Other than that, that was the significant upgrade
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that I did to my little netbook, and it's just trucking along still so far, so yeah, if you have an
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ASUS EPC sitting around, and yeah, you think it's maybe a little too slow, see if you can update
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the drive on it. I know there are other models of netbooks that use the standard hard drives,
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so those should be easy to upgrade, just a matter of getting a SATA SSD or something, and
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makes the world a difference. So yeah, that's pretty much it for this episode, not much to detail
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other than that. I hope you enjoyed it, I hope I didn't ramble too much. I know I have a tendency
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to do that, and I will say that in every episode, but yeah, I hope you enjoyed it. If you'd like to
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get in contact with me if you're on the Fediverse, I am now on the BSD.network instance,
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that is my main account there, so look for ClaudioM at BSD.network. My account, my old account,
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ClaudioM at mastadon.sdf.org is still there, but that's just an alternate account now. So if you
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want to reach me on the Fediverse, that's the place to be. As far as email, the email I was giving out
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previously apparently is going away, thank you Google for doing away with the free Google workspace,
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so the ClaudioAtlinXpacement.com is going away at some point. So if you want to reach me,
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you can reach me there, you can also find me on IRC, on ourcastplanet on the libera.chat network,
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and yeah, be sure to comment in the comment section of this episode. Anyway, hope you all have a
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wonderful year, have a wonderful day, and I'll talk to you soon. Take care.
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You've been listening to HackerPublicRadio at HackerPublicRadio.org. Today's show was
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today's show is released under creative comments,
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