Almost everything works, but after a lot of time configuring it. I didn't get suspend-to-RAM to work, and did not test wifi, bluetooth, the internal modem and the DVD burner (but cd writting works).
No kernel recompilation, no non-free modules !
You have to pass vga=771 to the bootloader, as explained in the help message, to get a correct display during the installation.
See this page, or my /etc/X11/xorg.conf.
aptitude install xfree86-driver-synaptics qsynaptics
Then qsynaptics (or vi /etc/X11/xorg.conf) to configure it.
It doesn't work with a kernel < 2.16 because of a bug in the DSDT. Works fine with 2.6.16 (in unstable only as I write this).
Suspend-to-RAM doesn't work for me. Well, it suspends, but does not recover :-(
aptitude install hibernate
and see my /etc/hibernate/hibernate.conf to suspend-to-disk one "hibernate" away
I use UseSysfsPowerState since ACPI and Suspend2 are not available in my Debian kernel.
You need the kernel module powernow-k8 and for example cpufreq_ondemand to have this work. Use modprobe powernow-k8 and/or add them to /etc/modules like this:
# /etc/modules: kernel modules to load at boot time. # # This file contains the names of kernel modules that should be loaded # at boot time, one per line. Lines beginning with "#" are ignored. ide-cd ide-disk ide-generic psmouse powernow-k8 cpufreq_ondemand
Then install cpufrequtils if not already done, and edit /etc/default/cpufrequtils to this for example:
ENABLE="true" GOVERNOR="ondemand" MAX_SPEED=0 MIN_SPEED=0
Alternatively, you can use one of cpufreqd or cpudyn
Overhead projector worked for me, but you have to change the resolution. Use xrandr for example.