While it is possible to run simple tasks with that little RAM, I'd
definitely upgrade to at least 2GB.  Your performance will improve
noticably if just through a lack of swapping.


On 01/30/2014 04:35 AM, Robin wrote:
> No joy on my attempt to upgrade from a fully-updated 12.04 to 14.04
> using 'update-manager -d -c'.
>
> It offered Trusty to upgrade to, told me about the requirements (in
> terms of disk space), and estimated the time of download to be 6
> minutes at my connection speed.
>
> After downloading the packages it got stuck on installation,
> "configuring apt."  I let it go for hours just to see if it would
> unlock itself and get going, but it was just frozen solid.  Hard
> reboot failed.  Reinstalled and updated 12.04 with no trouble.
>
> I wish I could brag about upgrading to Trusty!  I've never even
> attempted an upgrade before, always preferring a fresh install.  But
> hopefully something can be learned from my attempt at least.
>
> My computer is a Dell Dimension:
> Computer
> Processor     Intel(R) Celeron(R) CPU 2.53GHz
> Memory        506MB (339MB used)
> Operating System      Ubuntu 12.04.4 LTS
> User Name     robin (Robin)
> Date/Time     Thu 30 Jan 2014 05:20:21 AM EST
> Display
> Resolution    1280x1024 pixels
> OpenGL Renderer       Unknown
> X11 Vendor    The X.Org Foundation
> Multimedia
> Audio Adapter         ICH4 - Intel ICH5
>
> Running Xubuntu 12,04 LTS:
> Version
> Kernel        Linux 3.2.0-58-generic (i686)
> Compiled      #88-Ubuntu SMP Tue Dec 3 17:40:43 UTC 2013
> C Library     Unknown
> Default C Compiler    GNU C Compiler version 4.6.3 (Ubuntu/Linaro
> 4.6.3-1ubuntu5)
> Distribution  Ubuntu 12.04.4 LTS
> Current Session
> Computer Name         robin-Dell-DE051
> User Name     robin (Robin)
> Home Directory        /home/robin
> Desktop Environment   XFCE 4
>
>
>
> I hope this is helpful in some way for a first-time tester!
> -Robin
>
>
>

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