On Wed, Jan 06, 2010 at 09:21:06AM -0800, Charlie Kester wrote:
> On Wed 06 Jan 2010 at 04:25:31 PST Bill Moran wrote:
> >In response to Da Rock <[email protected]>:
> >
> >>Its been a while- work's has been keeping me very busy for months now.
> >>
> >>I have revived an old laptop which has very little RAM, and it is
> >>absolutely hammering the swap.
> >>
> >>I'm trying to set it up as a demo for some skeptics with no money, so I
> >>need email, internet (with plugins), openoffice, acrobat, and wine.
> >>
> >>Aside from all that though, for the academics of it how can I help this
> >>situation? The laptop has around 100MB RAM, with 16k free, and has a new
> >>install of FreeBSD 8.0.
> >
> >The most obvious thing to do is reduce the number of running programs.
> >Go through /etc/ttys, for example, and disable all but one or two consoles,
> >and edit /etc/rc.conf to disable anything that you don't need on the
> >system (possible sendmail, syslog?, etc)
> 
> The other most obvious thing to do is to look at the apps you're running
> and see if there are more lightweight alternatives.
> 
> If I had to run a machine like that, I'd probably want to avoid X
> Windows altogther and go console-only.  But it sounds like your
> "skeptics" won't let you do that.
> 
> Assuming you have to use X, you'll want to avoid heavyweight desktop
> environments like KDE or Gnome.  I like tiled window managers like musca
> or dwm myself, but your skeptics will probably want a more traditional
> window manager (aka MS-Windows clone) like xfce or openbox.


        Or even lighter weight, CTWM, which is just a step up from twm....


> 
> When you say "internet (with plugins)" I think you mean Firefox.  If
> this isn't a hard and fast requirement, take a look at some of the more
> lightweight browsers like Midori, Kazehakase or Arora.  (I'd recommend
> even more lightweight alternatives like surf or elinks, but I don't
> think your skeptics will approve.)
> 
> Same for OpenOffice.  There are alternatives to each of the apps in the
> OpenOffice suite that might not have all the same bells and whistles,
> but will run in much less RAM.   



        AbiWord is a great word-processor if that would serve Da Rock's
        needs.  For very kwik browsing I use links -G [[the graphical
        incarnation of the otherwise text]] links.  

        Every bell and whistle is 'just a tad more'; but then so many tads
        add up to tons; so it takes some forethought before piling on the
        apps.   Da Rock, did you mis-type that you only have 16k free? ....

> 
> For some ideas on which apps to try, look at the apps bundled in some of
> the Linux distros that target small machines.
> http://bengross.com/smallunix.html has a good list of these distros.


        Good one!

        gary


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-- 
 Gary Kline  [email protected]  http://www.thought.org  Public Service Unix

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