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Wiki Syntax

List of Wiki Tags

Name Tag Result Description
bold text [b]bold[/b] text bold text bold
italic text [i]italic[/i] text italic text italic
del text [del]deleted[/del] text deleted text deleted
underline text [u]underlined[/u] text underlined text underlined
head 1 [h1]heading[/h1]
heading
head 1
head 2 [h2]heading[/h2]
heading
head 2
head 3 [h3]heading[/h3]
heading
head 3
paragraph …[p]new paragraph[/p]

new paragraph

new paragraph
Ordered Lists
  • [list]
    • [*]first item[/*]
    • [*]second item[/*]
  • [/list]
  • first item
  • second item
make a list of items
Numbered List
  • [enum]
    • [*]first item[/*]
    • [*]second item[/*]
  • [/enum]
  1. first item
  2. second item
make a numbered list of items
list item [*]item[/*]
  • item
add an item to a list
code [code]some code[/code]
some code
some code
simple link [a]url[/a] url simple link
link with text [a]url|text[/a] text link with text
notebook [notebook]id[/notebook] id link to the notebook with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the page of the device itself, next to the model name)
wifi [wifi]id[/wifi] id link to the wifi with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the page of the device itself, next to the model name)
videocard [videocard]id[/videocard] id link to the videocard with the identifier equal to id (the identifier of each device model is written in the page of the device itself, next to the model name)

 

Compatibility classes

Notebooks

Class A (Platinum)
All the notebook devices work with a very good performance.
Example: all the devices work, the 3D acceleration is supported
Class B (Gold)
All the notebook devices work but not at full performance.
A typical example: all the devices work, but the 3D acceleration is not supported
Class C (Silver)
One main device is not supported.
Example: the internal wifi card does not work. You need an external USB card
Class D (Bronze)
More than one device is not supported
Class E (Garbage)
The notebook does not work with free software

Printers

Class A (Full)
All device functions and features are supported
Class B (Partial)
Printing supported but possibly at limited speed or print quality; scanning and/or faxing on some multifunction devices may not be supported
Class C (None)
The printer does not work with free software

Scanners

Class A (Full)
All device functions and features are supported
Class B (Partial)
Scanning supported but possibly at limited speed or quality; some other features may not be supported
Class C (None)
The scanner does not work with free software

 

Discover your hardware

(Thanks lluvia)

In order to know the details of your hardware you can carry out the following actions:

How to discover the model name of your notebook
See below your notebook or netbook
How to discover the model name of your device (if it is not a notebook)
If the device is integrated (example: a video card)
Open a terminal and type the following command:
lspci -vmm
or
lspci -vmm > FILENAME          # output to a file
You will obtain the list of your PCI devices, similar to the one written below
Slot:03:00.0
	Class:Network controller
	Vendor:Broadcom Corporation
	Device:BCM4311 802.11b/g WLAN
	SVendor:Hewlett-Packard Company
	SDevice:Device 1375
	Rev:02
	
	Slot:07:05.0
	Class:FireWire (IEEE 1394)
	Vendor:Ricoh Co Ltd
	Device:R5C832 IEEE 1394 Controller
	SVendor:Hewlett-Packard Company
	SDevice:Device 30cf
	Rev:05
	ProgIf:10
Note: The name of each device is written at the "Device" row, after the colon (see the text in bold in the above list)
If the device is an USB device (example: an external USB wifi card)
Open a terminal and type the following command:
lsusb -v
or
lsusb -v > FILENAME          # output to a file
You will obtain the list of your USB devices, similar to the one written below
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 0846:4260 NetGear, Inc. WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
		Device Descriptor:
		bLength						18
		bDescriptorType				1
		bcdUSB						2.00
		bDeviceClass				0 (Defined at Interface level)
		bDeviceSubClass				0
		bDeviceProtocol				0
		bMaxPacketSize0				64
		idVendor					0x0846 NetGear, Inc.
		idProduct					0x4260 WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
		bcdDevice					2.00
		iManufacturer				1
		iProduct					2
		iSerial						3
		...
		...
	
	Bus 002 Device 003: ID 08ff:2580 AuthenTec, Inc. AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
	Device Descriptor:
		bLength						18
		bDescriptorType				1
		bcdUSB						1.10
		bDeviceClass				255 Vendor Specific Class
		bDeviceSubClass			 	255 Vendor Specific Subclass
		bDeviceProtocol			 	255 Vendor Specific Protocol
		bMaxPacketSize0				8
		idVendor					0x08ff AuthenTec, Inc.
		idProduct					0x2580 AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
		bcdDevice					6.23
		iManufacturer				0
		iProduct					1 Fingerprint Sensor
		iSerial						0
		bNumConfigurations			1
		...
		...
Note: The name of each device is written at the row starting with "idProduct" (see the text in bold in the above list)
How to discover the year of commercialization of your notebook
Open a terminal and type the following command:
sudo dmidecode| grep "Release Date"
How to discover the kernel libre version you are using
Open a terminal and type the following command:
uname -r
How to discover the name of your video card
Open a terminal and type the following command:
sudo lspci
Then look for the row containing the string VGA or Display controller. You can also try one of the following commands:
lspci | grep "Display controller"
or
lspci | grep "VGA"
How to discover the VendorID and the ProductID of your device (VendorID:ProductID code)
(Thanks Michał Masłowski and Julius22)
If the device is integrated (example: a video card)
Open a terminal and type the following command:
sudo lspci -nnk
You should obtain a list of hardware similar to the one written below
03:00.0 Network controller [0280]: Broadcom Corporation BCM4311 802.11b/g WLAN [14e4:4311] (rev 02)
					Kernel driver in use: b43-pci-bridge
					Kernel modules: ssb
	05:00.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: nVidia Corporation G86 [GeForce 8400M GS] [10de:0427] (rev a1)
					Kernel modules: nouveau, nvidiafb
The strings in bold and placed inside the square brackets (in the above list) are the code you are looking for. The first set of digits (before the colon) are the VendorID, the second set of digits are the ProductID. In the above example: the VendorID:ProductID code of the wifi card (note the strings "Network controller" and "WLAN") is 14e4:4311 while the VendorID:ProductID code of the video card (note the string "VGA") is 10de:0427
If the device is an USB device (example: an external USB wifi card)
Open a terminal and type the following command:
sudo lsusb
You should obtain a list of hardware similar to the one written below
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 0846:4260 NetGear, Inc. WG111v3 54 Mbps Wireless [realtek RTL8187B]
	Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root hub
	Bus 002 Device 003: ID 08ff:2580 AuthenTec, Inc. AES2501 Fingerprint Sensor
The strings in bold (in the above list) are the code you are looking for. The first set of digits (before the colon) are the VendorID, the second set of digits are the ProductID. In the above example: the VendorID:ProductID code of the external USB wifi card (note the strings "Wireless") is 0846:4260
How to discover if the video card works
Install rss-glx by means of the package manager of your distribution or compiling it from source and try some screensavers (for example Skyrocket or Solarwinds). Check if you can play the screensaver (and/or if you can play it smoothly)
How to discover if the 3D acceleration works
Try to enable compiz
How to discover the name of your wifi card

Open a terminal and type the following command:

sudo lspci
Then look for the row containing the string Wireless or Network controller. You can also try one of the following commands:
lspci | grep "Wireless" 
or
lspci | grep "Network" 
How to discover the printer driver you are using
If you are using cups
Open a terminal and type the following command:
dpkg-query -W -f '${Version}\n' cups
How to discover the architecture of your notebook
Open a terminal and type the following command:
dpkg --print-architecture

 

Fully free GNU/Linux Distributions

Following are the GNU/Linux distributions we know of which have a firm policy commitment to only include and only propose free software. They reject non-free applications, non-free programming platforms, non-free drivers, or non-free firmware “blobs”. If by mistake they do include any, they remove it. To learn more about what makes for a free GNU/Linux distribution, see GNU Guidelines for Free System Distributions.

All of the distributions that follow are installable to a computer's hard drive and most can be run live.

(listed in alphabetical order)