I've had no problems with it, except when I click the mouse in certain places, and get a brief graphics glitch that I need to sort out. That is the only thing so far that I have to contend with.
The netbook boots faster, it shuts down faster, and who couldn't do with that? Gnome-colors Wise is installed, and looks really pretty on the desktop. I've installed the extensions I need in Firefox, I've installed Kopete (which I use quite frequently when in Linux; it's my favorite IM program). The Iron browser now has .deb for Debian-based distros, and ,rpm for rpm-based distros, so I snagged that as well; I'm here now in it.
The installation was smooth, it found the wireless connection at school right off the bat (in fact, it found all the hardware on this thing easily and quickly), the updates afterwards were fast, and for a distro that has everything installed that one could possibly use (except for those like me who like those odd packages here and there), that is an amazing feat. The installation itself didn't take 45 minutes. Normally, I'm nit-picking at a distro right after installation (and during it) for hours, trying to get it just right, but so far see no need here, other than installing Clementine, which I've done. I'll worry about codecs (which I think are already installed) and such later. All the plugins needed were installed already for browsing the internet (flash, java, etc.), and it was rare and ready to go pretty much when installation was finished.
The desktop itself is a not very obtrusive green and gray color, and since green is one of my two favorite colors, well... it's gorgeous to me.
For now, I have a learning curve, so am going to start here.
I am well pleased. This is what I was greeted with on first boot (post-installation reboot). Clickety-click the thumbnails:
Bada-bing,,,,

Bada-bang,,,, the first place I headed afterwards:

Bada-bong. Even first load of Firefox is really pretty:

Mandriva and Fedora, eat your heart out (sorry).
OBTW: I did not dump Windows for this installation. It's a dual-boot, as it was easier (the partitions were already there from the attempt at the Fedora installation) but it won't take me but about another day to dump it and go full with this.



Linux mint comes with inxi - out of the box