
The NorhTec Gecko Edubook is one of the most innovative netbooks around when it comes to hardware design. It runs on rechargeable AA batteries, making it easy to find replacements pretty much anywhere in the world. The OS and all the data is stored on an SD card, making it easy to upgrade. And the CPU and RAM are on a single chip which you can pop out and replace just as easily as changing a stick of RAM in most notebooks.
But there’s a down side. The 1GHz XCore86 CPU is pretty slow. And you take a performance hit when you run a relatively heavy operating system such as Windows XP or Ubuntu from an SD card. And that’s why I noted recently that Windows XP and WattOS Linux both felt pretty darn sluggish on this system. Sure, it’s not supposed to be good enough for watching Flash video from YouTube. But it also took an unreasonably long time to load the OS, launch programs, or even open web pages.
While these things might not be as important if you’re looking for a sub-$200 laptop to deploy across schools in developing nations, they definitely make the Edubook feel a lot slower than most other netbooks on the market.
Taking a suggestion from the folks at NorhTec, today I tried tweaking Windows XP a bit by disabling system restore, and indexing features, and adjusting the theme and a few other elements to improve performance. Overall, this helped a bit. For instance, programs launched a little faster, and I could get some videos to play, although the audio and video were out of sync.
But overall Windows XP was still pretty annoying to use. Fortunately, I picked up an 8GB SD card with a version of Puppy Linux optimized for the Edubook at CES. I popped off the netbook cover, slid out the old SD card and replaced it with the new one, and less than a minute later Puppy was up and running. And it felt like a whole new computer!






I managed to get a few more details about the NorhTec Gecko EduBook netbook. You know, the one I told you about yesterday that can 


