The RM RTAB910 Tablet is actually a Tatung TTAB-910e, rebadged and resold by Research Machines in the UK to educational establishments somewhere around 2003. They’re now turning up all over ebay as they reach the end of their useful school lifetimes, and I was lucky enough to pick one up for £70.
I’d been looking for something tablet-ey for roaming ebook/browser use, but the normal price for a Tablet PC is around £1000, with the only real budget option being the £350 Fizzbook Spin. I couldn’t afford either, so was saving for the Fizzbook when it struck me that I don’t really need a brand new one, and something second-hand and lower-spec would do just fine.
I say lower-spec, but compared to modern Netbooks a P866 processor and 256MB of RAM running Windows XP and Office 2003 at a half-decent speed really isn’t that bad – and I thought was pretty amazing for the price. All I really need is something with a decent-sized display thats capable of acting as a thin client into my wireless network so I can stream movies, or read ebooks, or surf the net. Then once I noticed the amount of these things being sold, I figured others might like a little how-to guide on turning these into productive members of society.
I made sure I picked a seller with a decently-high rating, and who had sold a few tablets recently with positive feedback, to limit the chances of being stuck with something unusable. Even so, I was expecting to have to maybe replace the HDD for the price it was listed or do some other work, but was pleasantly surprised when it arrived in full working order (and even a battery charge).
Specifications
866Mhz Processor
256MB Memory
20GB HDD
2x USB 1.0 Ports
Built-in Wifi
Onboard Intel Network Adaptor
Onboard Intel Graphics
- This is for the RTAB910-S01 “Student” version that I have. There was also an RTAB910-T01 “Teacher” tablet which added a fingerprint sensor for security plus a PCMCIA slot, which theoretically would be useful for adding in a PCMCIA-to-USB2.0 card.
Step 1 – Booting
The RTAB910 has no drives, so to install a new OS you’re going to need to either plug in an external USB CD/Floppy drive, or install boot files onto a USB stick. I used Hiren’s Boot CD, and followed the instructions for putting it on a memory stick. Then its just a matter of using the “Universal TCP/IP Network” option from there to map to boot into DOS with a mapped network drive – I’d rather do this than be limited to the speed of the USB 1.0 ports, plus I had no idea where my external USB drive caddy was anyway.
I took the opportunity here to clone the hard drive, which had arrived with a nice working install of Windows XP Tablet Edition plus Office 2003. My plan was to wipe the drive and install Ubuntu Linux onto the tablet. Normally I’d have chosen Debian but I recently found Ubuntu was better for quick and simple installs without having to mess around downloading essential functionality seperately.
One of the first issues I ran into is that Samba by default doesn’t accept LanMan authentication any more – see http://lists.samba.org/archive/samba-technical/2008-September/061363.html for details on turning this back on.
That problem solved, the machine ghosted happily over the network, so I can put it back to a near-factory state in the future if I decide to. Or if this project doesn’t work out.
To be continued…