Asus Eee Pc 4g Recovery Cd Download

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  1. Recently, I encountered a problem with my Asus EEE PC. I used the Recovery File within the Hard Disk by pressing F9 on the boot process, and I successfully restored my EEE PC to factory default.
  2. ASUS stopped supplying the system recovery CDs with the net books a few years ago. Therefore i don't have what I need. I have since replaced the hard drive and contacted ASUS. They have been rather useless and I can't find where to get the recovery CDs. Is there anywhere I can download or buy the disks? Any help wpuld be greatly appreciated!
  1. Asus Eee Pc 4g Specs
Last night, I have downloaded another EeePC Linux 1.6 iso (English version for 701) to try out and as usual I need to first create an Asus EeePC System Recovery USB disk. For me, this procedure is very simple but I don't know why many people have problem doing this. So I take this opportunity to generate some screenshots of the steps to serve as a guidance for others.

I bought a Eee pc a week ago will not connect to talktalk wireless. Wll not unlock works on bt. Its a Eee pc 4G have gone back to factory settings many many times. 100% signal and new talktalk router. Keeps saying pending any help please.thanks.


My EeePC 4G come with 1 no. Support DVD which contains the P701L.gz Linux system image, winxp drivers, user manual and some utilities. Just put this DVD into the DVDROM of your Windows XP desktop and the tool AsSetup.exe will autorun. [NB. If your Windows have been set to disallow CD autorun, you can navigate into the folder Bin and double-click to run it]
From the 2nd tab on the left, you can find the 'ASUS Linux USB Flash Utility', with which you can make a USB bootable disk with the Linux system image for EeePC system recovery.
Please note that some EeePC come with 2 DVDs: the Support DVD (with the winxp drivers, manuals and tools), and the Linux Recovery DVD (with the Linux system image). The 'ASUS Linux USB Flash Utility' is in the 1st DVD while the Linux system image is in the 2nd DVD. So you may need to swap DVDs during the process to create the Asus EeePC System Recovery USB disk.
If you don't have an original Linux Recovery DVD (e.g. if you have bought the winxp version), there are quite a no of places you can download the iso of this disk. Here are some links I know of:
http://downloads.k0k0.de/index.php?dir=EeePC%2F
http://www.eeepc-logiciels.com/downloads/xandrosFR16
http://www.asustreiber.de/downloads/eeepc/618-images
EeePC 701 ISO on SourceForge.net
In this case, you will also need to download the 'ASUS Linux USB Flash Utility' (BootTool.rar) which will help you format and configure a detected USB flash stick to boot, then copy the Linux system image to it.
After you have decompressed the package, you will find a folder BootTool. Click on any of the .exe files, and you will end up with the same FreeOSTool.exe window.The screenshots below show the steps how this is run:
If BootTool can detect an USB flash drive, then it should directly arrive at the next screenshot:
Select the 1st line and click on [Run]. You will arrive at a 'Confirm Dialog'.
Click on [Yes] to continue, and the progress bar will show up.
After formatting is completed, the utility will ask you to unplug and re-plug the USB flash disk, then click on [Retry].
There it will proceed to copy the Linux system image files to the USB flash disk.
Success!
In the end, you should have the System Recovery USB disk with volume label 'EEEPC' (or 'EEEPC-701' depending on your model), and some folders and files like this in the disk:
Out of these files, P701L.gz is the Linux system image. It is less than 1GB for 701 and those models with a 4GB 1st SSD. But for those models with a harddisk, e.g. 1000H, it will be as big as 1.5 GB. So for those SSD models, theoretically 1GB should be enough for the System Recovery Disk. This is also what I use to use. But some people have reported problem with 1GB USB flash disks, and now even Asus recommends 2GB flash disk.
Another file of interest is the file /boot/initrd.gz. This is the initial RAM disk image. After the Linux kernel (vmlinuz) is loaded by the grub bootloader, grub will look for, unpack and load this initrd.gz according to the default entry (or the entries you select) in the grub boot menu config file (/boot/grub/menu.lst). This is where the actual bootscript is.
In all those of my hacks: Boot Xandros from USB for Dummies and Restore EeePC with unionfs, what I am doing is just to replace the original bootscript here with a custom bootscript (that loads required kernel modules, seeks the USB flash disk by volume label, mount it in /xan and run another script) and another script that performs all the operations as required.

Asus Eee Pc 4g Specs


Asus Eee Pc 4g Recovery Cd DownloadSome other files, in particular blockcount.dat and user_start.dat, are also vital to the restore process. So check and verify if all the files are here. If you run into problem, you may want to check this wiki: Howto: USB Restore.
If you don't have a Windows XP desktop, you can still do this in Linux. I won't cover it here. Check these wiki:
http://wiki.eeeuser.com/howto:usbrestore#in_linux
HOWTO Make a Standard USB Image under Linux
Now you are ready to restore your EeePC. Plug the System Recovery USB disk into your EeePC, power it up and press [ESC] as soon as you see the Asus BIOS splash screen, then select the USB flash disk as 1st boot device at the BIOS screen similiar to this.
Here is a picture of the screen display during the restore process. You will be prompted to enter 'yes' in the middle of the process.
The restore process takes about 5 minutes if you have a fast enough USB flash disk. On some old USB devices, e.g. multi-card reader + mini-SD card, it may take longer. The longest I have experienced is 40 minutes!
P.S. For models with 2 SSD, the bootscript will also format the 2nd SSD to Linux ext3 filesystem and assign a volume label of 'HOME' to it. Then the system will mount it to /home at bootup (by seeking volume label). However, what the bootscript does is to look for a non-removable bit in the controller firmware of the 2nd SSD (/dev/sdb). People have reported that after they installed winxp or even ubuntu in their EeePC, the removable bit in the 2nd SSD will be changed to 'removable', and the bootscript will think it is a hot-pluggable removable disk and will fail to format it and assign the correct volume label. Then they ended up losing the 16GB 2nd SSD (not automatically mounted by the system).

My recently aquired (used) asus eee pc 701 came with XP installed and no support CD/DVD. I wanted to get rid of XP and have a play with the stock linux O/S instead: I expected this to be an easy gimmie, but it was not, and ate up an evenings worth of my time googling around for solutions so I’m going to lay out the shortcuts here to hopefully save someone else the pain.

As mentioned, the eeepc I acquired had XP installed (nlited) and no recovery DVD, so no option of using the built in rescue partition to restore the EEEPC back to the factory state. (Apparently you can hit F9 normally and it takes to to a ‘restore me from hidden partiton’ type GRUB menu). I figured this wouldn’t be a problem, I’d just go to the Asus support site and grab the image. Its linux, right, should be able to get the firmware images easily from the manufacturer, right?

Wrong.

I ransacked the official eeepc.asus.com support site looking for what I needed: at the other end of the search I can honestly say I found zero useful material or info there. (Don’t even bother visiting it, you’re better off going straight to google for this). The support/download section had BIOS updates and the like, but nothing to help with a reinstall. Even searching the forums for what I imagined to be blatantly obvious issues (eg: where do I download the restore cd?) came up with bupkis.

I concluded, to my chagrin, Asus has decided to withhold the support software (a linux distro?) for whatever reason, and the forums were evidently being policed according to this policy, removing any useful information pertaining to it. I expected to find at least a link to an outside site, as google was telling me about various helpful torrents: not finding even a whisper of this on the official support forums smells like seafood.

After a bit of googling and torrent searching I found a few ISO images which purported to be eeepc 701 flavored including a copy of Ubuntu, but I couldn’t get them to run from USB key: syslinux made the drive bootable but either the kernel options were wrong and linux would not boot, or I could get it to boot by plugging in manual options (specifying location of initrd etc) but only made it partway into a boot before falling over and restarting. (I didn’t bother noting or chasing down those errors as I didn’t particularly fancy my mission this evening to be going down the road of fixing boot issues in roll-your-own livecds booting from USB sticks). I realise I’ll probably have to suss this out properly for installing Ubuntu and other flavors down the road, but for now I just wanted the stock Xandros system restore.

Asus Eee Pc 4g Recovery Cd Download

I eventually found some downloads which solved the problem.

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Heres the process in WinXP:

  1. The first thing you need is the EeePC 901 ASUS Linux USB Flash Utility available from eeefiles.com (Link updated! http://www.netbookfiles.com/574/eee-pc-8g-xp-asus-usb-flash-utility-version-v1131/ ). I guess this is the version which comes on the support DVD, but I don’t have that and it wasn’t available from the official site, so… (By the way, thanks a lot Asus, making me resort to downloading from a third party site instead of a trusted source).
  2. The next file you’ll need is the Xandros Eee Pc 701 Edition ISO. Get it from the eeepc 701 community project on sourceforge.
  3. Once you’ve downloaded both of the above its all pretty much downhill!
  4. Now either burn the ISO to a physical disk, or mount the image using a program like daemontools.
  5. Plug in your 2GB+ USB stick
  6. Run the USB Flash utility, select the detected USB drive,wait for it to format. If prompted, remove and re-insert the stick after the format. It will ask for the linux disk (either insert the physical copy you burned or mount the ISO into a drive).
  7. Linux will copy (it takes a few minutes) and at the end you should have a bootable restore on the USB drive.
  8. Power on the eeepc, hit F2 for BIOS options, go to “Advanced” and set the “OS Installation” to “Start”. F10 to Save and exit.
  9. Put the USB drive in your eeepc, reboot, hit escape on POST to get to the boot menu, and you’re off.
  10. Xandros will install (took about ten minutes on mine). Remember to go back into the BIOS and set “OS Installation” to “Finished” once its finished.

That really shouldn’t have taken me a whole evening of googling to get done =