A Newbie's Guide To A Lo-Fat Linux Desktop 352
A reader writes:"This article is what I needed a few years ago, when I first started playing with Linux. It's about building a fast and usable desktop using software that doesn't need a squillion horsepower." Good article if you are putting together an older machine to run as a dedicated box, or what to cobble together a terminal with spare parts.
lo-fat? (Score:4, Funny)
there are distros for this purpose (Score:4, Informative)
or, if you want a beautiful pure-UNIX box with unbeatable package management and outstanding security, install NetBSD (my favorite
Re:there are distros for this purpose (Score:3, Informative)
The reason I run debian and shy away from distros like RH and Mandrake is to be able to keep my computer waist slim, and its diet clean and lean.
I don't know about slackware, but debian does the job admirably. I love it and no it's not really hard to set up. Just go to #debian irc and ask questions, you'll get nice answers.
PPA, the girl next door.
Re:there are distros for this purpose (Score:2, Funny)
> distros like RH and Mandrake is to be able to
> keep my computer waist slim, and its diet clean
> and lean.
Hmm, let's see:
1) buy linux CD, and some coffee to go with it.
2) come home, place CD on desk, sit down.
3) reboot with CD, cool yourself with a soda.
4) *think* about package selection, with a coffee
5) relax while it installs, with a bag of candy/doridos.
6) celebrate installation with a cold beer and pizza.
7) tweak system, freshen breath with thinkgeek mints.
Guys, computers don't get fat.
Debian installation woes. (Score:3, Interesting)
I really don't quite understand where Debian got its reputation for having such a difficult installer. I mean, sure it's a bit tough for Mom and Dad to puzzle out, but for anyone with any sort of *nix experience its a piece of cake.
And yet, these are the people always bitching about the supposed difficulty.
Hell, look at me; I'm a total newbie to Linux, more of a BSD guy. I decided to try out Debian for the m68k on a wacky old Mac I had lying around, and managed to get everything up and running without too much of a hassle. And if an idiot like me can do that on a weird hardware platform (Q950 Mac with the SCSI problems) and an OS that he doesn't understand, anyone savvy enough to have heard of Debian ought to be able to pull it off.
--saint
Re:there are distros for this purpose (Score:5, Interesting)
But last time I checked installing apache under debian requires installing libmysql first (explain that one to me). Installing postfix requires installing sasl, ldap, pcre, and mysql libs. Try installing any of the courier suit in a "waist slim" state. Debian wants to install telnetd and inetd out-of-the-box and I can't remove netkit-inetd because netbase depends on it. Samba requires CUPS even though I don't own a printer. CUPS in turn makes me install tiff libraries. I need to install db2 for man and perl but I need db3 for postfix. Vim and links require I have gpm installed even though there is no mouse on the computer.
All this is on a relatively bare bones server. Debian is nice but "waist slim" it is not.
Re:there are distros for this purpose (Score:2)
1 - the install
2 - package management
And in your case, #2 will help
Red Hat and the like are killing Linux (Score:2, Insightful)
if i wanted 2.6G of eye candy on my hard drive, infesting my core memory and gobbling up CPU time, i'd just install Windows XP. i'm glad there are still distros which value a small footprint.
Re:Red Hat and the like are killing Linux (Score:5, Informative)
In the end, an rpm -qa, then an rpm -qi on each "questionable" package helps me to remove packages that don't sound/look after the install.
These distros aren't "killing Linux", they're just doing what they should be doing-- showing new users the wealth of open source and free software programs available with a wonderful free OS. If you don't like the extra crap, then feel free to not install it/deinstall it later.
I'd rather a newbie have more apps to play with, then him get a stripped-down Linux box with no 'fun' programs and having him ask where all the real software is. Linux could use more desktop market share, and more applications with a default install help to fuel that.
You can make those distros slim. (Score:2)
I personally use Mandrake with ROX-Filer and Windowmaker as an environment. It was nice having all of the packages I would normally have to download and compile on my own already included.
debian/slack for newbies? (Score:3, Interesting)
I started with zipslack since I had a zip drive but not a cdburner at the time. I got it working from the zip drive, but I couldn't get it installed right on the hard drive for some reason that I've since forgotten. Then I broke down and bought the debian box. The installation went ok, even if it was a bit confusing, until we got to XF86Config.
Ye flipping gods, what a nightmare that was. I had no idea how much memory the ancient video card in my $40 486 machine had, hell I couldn't even figure out the model number. And it took me a really long time to find the horizontal and vertical specs for my monitor online.
Someone please do tell me if this is now easier with debian. And in fairness, I was using a very stripped down version of slackware. But, being a newbie, what did I know?
Redhat is better for newbies simply because of the hardware autodetection. I just wish they would install blackbox by default instead of kde/gnome.
Re:debian/slack for newbies? (Score:3, Informative)
It isn't. If you don't know exactly what's in your box, and you're not an expert -- Even people who would normally be comfortable with a Linux desktop, for the most part, aren't up to ripping apart their computers and scouring the net for the model numbers -- you'll never get your hardware set up properly.
On a box where I don't know the hardware, my first move is to do an install of Mandrake. I write down all the drivers loaded, etc., and then wipe it and install Debian. But, of course, that's not something that a newbie would want or be able to do -- so in their case, they ought to just stick with Mandrake (or Red Hat, or whatever, although IME mandrake has the best hardware detection.)
Are there any of the 'minimal distributions' combined with a good installer that does a decent job of hardware autodetection? I might be convinced to switch to it, if it could get me away from the silly, two-step, annoying dance I have to do.
Re:debian/slack for newbies? (Score:2)
Ye flipping gods, what a nightmare that was.
[...]
Someone please do tell me if this is now easier with debian.
Yes and no. Debian still has the same installer it always had, and many folks feel this installer is not newbie-friendly. I know two people who tried it and hate it, but I do okay with it.
But the major part of your nightmare was getting XFree86 to work, and that has indeed gotten better. XFree86 version 4.x has much improved config files and much improved detection of hardware, and the Debian install takes advantage of this.
I would still say that most newbies should have a guru do the initial Debian install for them. Once it is installed, Debian is a joy to use and administer, especially with a high-speed connection to the Internet.
I do agree that the installer for Progeny is better, but that is only if it works. I had a friend run the Progeny installer, and when it tried to auto-detect his GeForce2 video card, it exploded, leaving Progeny half-installed. I should have scrubbed everything and just run the plain Debian installer from the beginning, but instead I installed aptitude and then went over all the packages by hand, fixing the configs or installing missing stuff, and it took forever. (When I was done he had a Woody system, not a Progeny system, because I changed his sources.list to point to a Debian mirror instead of to Progeny.)
Corel Linux, based on Debian but with a cool newbie-friendly graphical installer, also has a problem with GeForce video cards. Maybe 2.x fixed it, but with 1.x the graphical install would just hang, and there was no non-graphical installer! The official recommended workaround was to install some other video card Corel's installer could deal with, do the install, then swap in the GeForce and manually configure XFree86.
The plain-text Debian install starts to look better after the friendly ones bite you a few times. But the Mandrake installer starts to look even more better, because in my experience, it just works. If only we could get the Mandrake guys to port their installer to Debian!
steveha
Re:debian/slack for newbies? (Score:3, Insightful)
The chipset had a logo but not a model number on it (Trident). Given how much I knew at the time, I had no idea that non-3d-accelerated video cards even had on-board memory. And my 28.8k dialup modem access didn't exactly lend itself to quick and easy answers. I was excited and I persevered, but I wouldn't wish my experience on anyone.
None of the specifics matter all that much though- newbies need to be able to boot into a usable interface, they will have plenty of command line hacking and learning ahead of them, but the installation is *not* the correct place for a trial-by-fire learning experience, unless the operating system is specifically designed to scare away the feeble-minded (not a bad goal, but not, imho, the goal of slack or debian).
Re:Stripped-down Debian? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Stripped-down Debian? (Score:2, Insightful)
I haven't used Red Hat since version 4.2 and never Mandrake, but of the distributions I've tried the one thing that seems to remain constant is: your installation won't be bloated unless you want it to be.
Why weight down new hardware with new crap? (Score:2, Insightful)
FVWM (Score:3, Interesting)
Does anybody actually use those silly little file managers? IMHO, they just get in the way - why not just use the command line?
Re:FVWM (Score:2, Redundant)
Not everyone likes to use the command line for every little thing. I know it's powerful, you know it's powerful, but the newbie who is using linux for the first time needs that "silly little file manager" to get things done. That's why Linux is so great, you can use what you want and ditch what you don't.
Re:FVWM (Score:2)
I have a Sun Ultra 60 on my desktop, and I use WindowMaker. FVWM works well too, but I like the NeXTstep feel of WM.
Agreed -- small window managers are the best!
--NBVB
Re:FVWM (Score:2)
Re:FVWM (Score:2)
Re:FVWM (Score:2)
Seems targeted exactly at me 'n' my PII 233....
ctwm (Score:3, Interesting)
I can beat that: ctwm [ctwm.dl.nu], aka Claude's Tab Window Manager. It's a modified version of the vererable TWM to give such modern amenities as virtual desktops, animated gliphs, and the like. I've used it off and on for about 7 years - tried other window managers, but I just keep coming back. It hasn't changed much in that time, but I think that's a good thing: it's stable as a rock - hasn't crashed, hung or gone into a funky state on me once. And it does all this with negliable resources: I used to run it on NCD X-terminals and the like and it ran like a champ. Okay, it started to drag on a Sun 3/60, but what wouldn't? On my modern 1200x1600 24-bit desktop it's using just 1820kB resident, 3204kB total memory, which is on par with tcsh. And since I've logged in 9 hours ago it's used just 23 seconds of time on my 600MHz box (and that's with animated gliphs).
The downside? Someone who isn't used to a traditional X environment will be lost - it's not the place to start someone who just came from Windows, but once you get used to it and customize it for your needs, you just forget that it's there. All the configuration is through a single rc file and the man page documents the options really well. The only downside to its configurability is that there are so many options that it takes a long time to play with them and find what you like.
Oh, and the reason I started using it was that all my friends were sick of TWM (which was the default wm in our CS department back then) so they all started using FVWM. I liked FVWM's features (esp. virtual desktops) and configurability, but I didn't like the overhead (especially since I did end up on X-terminals and old Suns quite a bit), so I searched around and found ctwm.
My 2 cents,
-"Zow"
Re:FVWM (Score:2, Interesting)
Start with X? (Score:3, Interesting)
So when I installed linux (SuSE at first) I benefitted greatly from using just console for a short while (mostly because I couldn't setup X properly, but that's another thing). I learned how things worked in this new system before I encountered window managers that assumed I knew such things.
I certainly understand the need for lightweight WM's for some machines, but for learning purposes the only thing they can provide is maybe Netscape to help files. Of course imo someone should use the system they are comfortable with to browse help, because god knows the easiest way to get frustrated is having to fight with a machine while trying to find help.
Why no mention of APT? (Score:5, Insightful)
You'll find a lot of this stuff is included on the installation cd's of most distro's, or you can follow the links. Wherever possible, these point to the project's homepage, or else to rpmfind's download site. If you're using something other than a RedHat style distro, you may have to backtrack a bit from the rpmfind sites to get the right version.
No offence, but fuck backtracking
Best of all, freshrpms.net is now available via APT. Freshrpms is an invaluable source of this kind of stuff - eg, if you're into DVD, its always up to date with the latest Ogle, Xine, Transcoder and Drip packages. Furthermore, Matthias from Freshrpms does requests: just name the software and he'll package it. He's also a bloody nice guy and writes tutorials on how to package properly too, asking for very little in return. Freshrpms is easily the best Red Hat package source out there.
Anyway, get APT here [rpmfind.net]. Install it, then stick the following in your
rpm http://apt-rpm.tuxfamily.org/apt redhat-7.2-i386/redhat os
rpm http://apt-rpm.tuxfamily.org/apt redhat-updates-7.2/redhat os
rpm http://apt-rpm.tuxfamily.org/apt redhat-extra-7.2/redhat extra
rpm http://apt.freshrpms.net freshrpms/7.2 main
rpm-src http://apt.freshrpms.net freshrpms/7.2 main
rpm-src http://apt-rpm.tuxfamily.org/apt redhat-7.2-i386/redhat os
rpm-src http://apt-rpm.tuxfamily.org/apt redhat-updates-7.2/redhat os
rpm-src http://apt-rpm.tuxfamily.org/apt redhat-extra-7.2/redhat extra
As you probably know, Ximian Gnome including Red Carpet is available from ximian.com. Combined with APT they provide a way to run up to date software on a stable distribution using standard packages, which as far as I know isn't available from anyone but Connectiva, Red Hat, and Polished Linux Distribution.
Re:Why no mention of APT? (Score:3, Insightful)
Kernel (Score:4, Informative)
Zipslack would probaby be best for this base system. Or a stripped-dopy (minimal install) of Slack or Deb.
Ultralinux on Debian (Score:2, Interesting)
Dont want to start a flame war (Score:5, Informative)
In my opinon, you have to try as many UNIXs as you can. get an extra box. Install anything else on it than your normal install. play. repeat. There is more to computing than Linux. I just saw someone get modded down in another thread for mentioning Solaris. Solaris rocks. He got modded cause Solaris aint Linux.
You need the right tool for the right job. Square pegs dont fit in round holes, and so on. Once you do BSD, you will never go back. I have heard of people falling in love with Debian also. YMMV
Re:Dont want to start a flame war (Score:2)
Freebsd was a beautiful thing for me, as it weaned me from the bloat of redhat.
I have since switched to debian, but that is only because I need the nvidia binary drivers for my main system, and I like my systems to behave exactly the same way.
If you don't need those damnable drivers, there is no reason not to use *bsd. They are way more old-school unix-y, and seem more concerned with "correctness" then the linux camp.
Cuchullain
Re:Dont want to start a flame war (Score:2)
Sounds damn good to me. I hope they'll set it up so you can cvsup and rebuild a core system.
Re:Dont want to start a flame war (Score:3, Insightful)
I see comments similar to these so often anymore. People, take the time to learn kickstart. You really can make RedHat installs as lean as you want them to be. I spent 3 years on Slackware, and 3 years on RH. It's hard to beat Slackware for thin, but you can do some pretty thin setups with RH.
Re:Dont want to start a flame war (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm not reluctant to admit that my experience with Solaris might be somewhat limited. I only use it as a desktop on the University, but from that single experience I certainly would never say anything like "Solaris rocks". They have Solaris 8 running on Ultra Sparcs at 500Mhz with 1.25 GB of RAM ans still things seem slow. I got an out-of-memory error while making a very simple movie with Matlab the other day. Mathematica can't happily scroll the view if there are images involved and compiling (java, c, etc.) seems dogslow compared to my Linux box at home. Maybe Solaris does rock, but I sure wouldn't have come to that conclusion from my experience.
erm ... some things are a little stupid ... (Score:4, Informative)
Now for older boxen ... the best way to make them efficient is to follow the Keep It Simple Silly method of making a working box. Win95-Lite was made for this exact reason ... but that's just if you want win95 ...
For linux I would have to recommend Slackware or Debian ... after a base install you have very little bloat and very few apps that you won't need. Apt makes it real nice to find and install, but slack also has a decent package list to choose from.
You may also want to look into the BSD's ... all of them have a very bland base install and all of them run the latest greatest stuff.
Along with being so great all of these (except slack) offer net installs, so all you need is a disk drive to boot the things up ... so if the CD has crapped out (which it has on many old computers) you can still do a full install on the net.
People are saying FVWM or other things like that ... SawFish and BlackBox were made to be VERY lightweight window managers and like windowmaker are very customizable and since they are so small ... they take up a very small memory foot print.
The thing would also make a cool Home Server, Make it into a router, webserver, email server, and file server ... perfect ...
Lastly ... you could set it up with a VNC client and use it that way as a terminal system. I think the one thing that needs to be realized is that old boxes are far from useless.
BSDs as an option. (Score:3, Insightful)
I ran my server (blue.roadflares.org) for months handing HTTP and SMTP for my domain on a 230 meg hard drive in a Quadra 700.
That's ancient, to those of you who don't use Macs. Roughly equivalent to a low end 486.
The operating system? NetBSD.
If you've got _seriously_ old hardware, like that Quadra, or the 486 that's serving roadflares.org now, or the IPC I've got here, try Net or Open BSD. They run like champs.
--saint
Re:erm ... some things are a little stupid ... (Score:2)
A few more suggestions (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:A few more suggestions (Score:3, Informative)
Security - that's just the problem with older, unsupported distributions like rh5.x. There would be so many holes that would have to be plugged that you'd effectively end up with a new distro anyway. That's the best case, assuming you were willing to scour several years worth of bugtraq vulnerabilities and do a lot of manual labour yourself. Why bother with all the hassle, when a newer distro does all the heavy lifting for you?
I've installed Slackware 8 on a few older systems and I'm very impressed with it. Very lean and stable. It gives you good control over the install process, and it's easy to squeeze it onto small hard drives and old computers. And it's new and still supported, meaning that security updates are only a download away.
Nedit lightweight ?? (Score:4, Informative)
Nedit is not bad, but a terminal based editor will KILL it for RAM usage. Like vi, or Microemacs, or joe, or even jed.
IceWM is OK, but blackbox is the screamer lightweight favorite Window Manager.
For a file manager use the command line. Or MC - another terminal based utility (GUI utilities chunk out 8-10 MB RAM just for playing).
For graphics viewing, skip ee. Raster is cool and all, but his imlib1.0 sucked for RAM usage. Try imlib2 and ee2, or eog. Either minimzes RAM usage while viewing images. GQview is pretty good, too.
All browsers blow chunks for using RAM, especially konqueror and mozilla. Opera is the clear lo-fat winna. Or lynx, or w3m.
And work on X - hard. Make a beautiful image your desktop background, and give up 20-30 Megs of RAM. Change it to a flat color (xsetroot -solid black) and you gain a lot back. Change X to 16 bit, and/or lose some resolution and you will gain more. I guess it all depends on what compromises you are willing to make. You can always hit Ctrl-Alt-F2 and save even more.
re: blackbox (Score:3, Interesting)
> Window Manager.
Maybe in the current pantheon of "modern" window managers, but it still ranks pretty low against some ancestors.
The fvwm breed, including afterstep 1.0, are immensely easy on the memory (heck I ran as 1.0 just fine on my 486 with four megs of ram all those years ago), and support a greater feature set than blackbox.
BB suffers from a serious case of "my way or no way" from the programmer. The manager is tuned to his tastes strictly and without deviation, which makes it hard to tune things to satisfy.
afterstep 1.0 otoh supports images (bb doesn't), key bindings (bb doesn't without added modules), and when I tested afterstep actually used less memory than bb. bb also does some other odd wheel-reinventings, like the bsetroot command.. why isn't xsetroot good enough? bb also has an odd homegrown config/theme setup, while fvwm and afterstep benefit from a very old and very documented configuration scheme.
Incidentially I did this testing earlier today.. heh, quiet day at work.
Moral of the story being, afterstep 1.0 may be 4-5 years old now but it can still give blackbox a run for it's money.
Re: blackbox (Score:3, Interesting)
But I still wonder what the appeal of the heavy weights is, I can run afterstep on a 25 mhz machine, gnome wants more power than my dual 400 mhz has to offer.
Re:Nedit lightweight ?? Yes and usable too (Score:2)
The difference is about a meg. Until you turn syntax highlighting on.
The real bummer with nedit is it cannot be plugged into terminal utilities like mutt and slrn easily. You already have a terminal loaded in ram, so you can add vi (a few hundred K RAM) and edit your email, or add nedit and add 3 Megs, which will not load quite so fast.
The difference on my 486 while C programming 1000 line files and using syntax highlighting was enough to make me change to jed. The LOAD time difference. I've never quite been a vi fan but it is certainly usable too.
The huge benefit of nedit is its
1) power and extensibility
2) consistency with Mac/Windows editor interfaces
For that combination it RULEZ.
Video players, fm and word processing (Score:4, Insightful)
Thanks to avifile author we have many free and powerfull players today. Please try mplayer [sf.net] and avifile [sf.net] if you don't know it.
How xanim or binary-only mtv can be better than free alternatives? Last time I checked it was even impossible to rewind a movie there!
XWC as fm? Well, ok, but I preffer emelfm [sf.net], which is much better than mc for me (try to use mc in directory with 10000 files!).
Last but not least - word processing. What about LyX [lyx.org]? OK, there is kword and abiword, but there are fat. IMHO LyX is much more powerfull than real MS Word, and it's fast and light. The only problem with LyX is xforms
So - it's nice to see that kind of article, but I think choices are not best there.
Web browsers (Score:2)
The article suggests Netscape as the best browser for a 32 meg machine (which I guess is what counts as 'low-memory' these days). But if you really want a small but usable browser, try Dillo [sourceforge.net]. It worked beautifully last time I tried it - apart from a problem logging in to Slashdot, which was enough to make me go back to Mozilla :-(.
Linux From Scratch (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Linux From Scratch (Score:4, Informative)
More usable, and still just as light (Score:4, Interesting)
And whatever you do, DON't run KDE apps!
Amen brother. (Score:2)
For example, I type ctrl-alt-t and I get a terminal (rxvt -fg green -bg black +sb --geometry 80x50). Or I can hit ctrl-alt-r for a run dialogue.
If I want to dial the net I hit ctrl-alt-UP. (rxvt -fg green -bg black +sb -geometry 50x8 -e
If I want to dial down, I hit ctrl-alt-DOWN. (killall ppp)
My dock looks pretty attractive too with WmCalClock (/usr/ports/x11-clocks/wmcalclock). If I double click it, I get jpilot.
Below that is wmfire (/usr/ports/sysutils/wmfire) for eye candy / system load. Then comes my mixer, wmmixer (/usr/ports/audio/wmmixer), and XMMS (/usr/ports/audio/xmms).
With a little bit of playing with the menus (the drag and drop menu configuration is great) you can organize your programs quite easily.
Hope any of this is useful.
-Peter
Kword (Koffice) is lightweight? (Score:2, Informative)
I didn't see a mention of a good email client (Mozilla doesn't count) And again, he likes kmail?? For a lightweight desktop??? I would highly recommend Sylpheed [good-day.net] as a fast, light, easy to use, yet powerful (enough) mail client.
There are so many problems with this article, that I'll stop now, I'm sure the rest of you have already pointed them out (time for me to read the comments now :)
Re: Moz doesn't count... (Score:2)
The lack of a spell checker is a HUGE stumbling block for Mozilla. Other than send and receive mail, that is the ONLY feature _I_ really care about in an e-mail client. I was able to hack in the netscape spell checker into an earlier build, but that did not work in the last couple revs. Digging in deeper it looks like Netscape did/can't release that due to 3rd party problems. Got more info and it might be possible to use ispell or pspell, but seems know one knows if they can use it based on licenses or compatiblity issues. Moz will be at 1.0 long before I could puzzle out from ground zero how to add to the codebase (in a positive manner), but it looks like there is a vaccum there for someone to lead a team - expecially us mozilla newbies wanting to help.
Re: Moz doesn't count... (Score:3, Interesting)
http://freefall.homeip.net/stuff/spellcheck/ [homeip.net]
Why I like IceWM (Score:2, Insightful)
My school Lab (Score:2, Informative)
I had to setup a lab for the middle school using some p1 200's with 32megs of ram.
I used Redhat 7.1 XFS and IceWM.
They are used solely for internet surfing,
and I put Netscape Navigator 4.78 on there.
The CPU usage bar has yet to spike past half way.
I turned off all unneeded services, even Sendmail.
I even decided against using ipchains, because they are already behind a firewall.
how about ultra-low-fat (Score:2)
Re:how about ultra-low-fat (Score:2)
similar articles? (Score:2)
i've been looking for articles such as this on th web with not much success...
- anyone know of similar articles on th web (lightweight gnu/linux, lightweight computing) or even whole websites dedicated to th subject?
thanks in advance
best distro for this (Score:5, Informative)
Linux from Scratch [linuxfromscratch.org]
Now if someone can tell me why programs (so far MAKEDEV and Lilo) won't run from
harddrive
most lightweight graphcial web-browser? (Score:3, Interesting)
ok, there's always lynx and w3m for lightweight web-browsing
but my question is - what is th most lightweight, free software graphical web-browser out there? - nothing fancy, just functional please
Re:most lightweight graphcial web-browser? (Score:3, Informative)
(BTW, I ran some Python-based benchmarks the iPAQ and it seems to have horsepower similar to that of a 66-MHz 486.)
Re:most lightweight graphcial web-browser? (Score:2)
i said thanks in advance but thanks again - just been looking at th dillo web-page and it looks to be exactly what i want - a functional, no bullshit web browser under th gpl
looks like a mainly european development team which just serves to fuel my suspicion that there's a lot of good stuff going on in europe that slips under th radar
Re:most lightweight graphcial web-browser? (Score:2)
Lo Fat?!? How about Slim? (Score:2)
20 megs RAM on a Linux 2.4.17 running 486/33 laptop.
640x480 8-bit LCD (Compaq AVGA)
XFree 3.x server
I'm half tempted to recomile Xfree.
My way... (Score:5, Informative)
rox.sf.net [sf.net]
www.kensden.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Oroborus/ [blueyonder.co.uk]
www.chatjunkies.org/fspanel/ [chatjunkies.org]
Is it me or is this article not exactly useful? (Score:3, Interesting)
"use GIMP for image editing"? Thanks guys, would never have thought of that one. Better yet: "install KDE even if you don';t use it as the apps are good"
Look, I found in the back of my dead machine closet an old 386 laptop (woo, way back) and I want to set it up for my brother to encourage him to not email me instead of not calling, so I need a really low-fat linux. Whats the advice there? No PCMCIA or CD-ROM and about 4Mb of RAM, so KDE is out. Suspect X might be too. I'm going to try debian via floppy and fake a PPP connection via COM1 into my LAN for apt-get goodness.
Also, since when have newbies needed guides to setting up unusual configs? I'm an experienced systems engineer, I run a laptop thats well documented, whose manufacturer puts millions into Linux, and happens to be a model Alan Cox personally owns. Despite all this, I can't get the fecking sound card to work. (It works now, because I wanted to listen to MP3 using it pver the holidays, so I uninstalled Linux and put Win2K on it, which detects and configures and makes work all the hardware out of the box) You have more problems than "newbies can't work out which window manager to put KDE on top of to save on space", people.
That's it, from now on I'm drinking decaf.
Re:Is it me or is this article not exactly useful? (Score:2)
If I were to be clever, a null modem cable between the serial ports of the laptop and my regular machine, PPP over that, and route out that way.
The actual box will need almost nothing. A base system, something to make the PPP easier if needed (I normally use wvdial, but pon and poff will be in the abse install) and then some arrangement to read POP messages. My preference is for a full POP client, although thats not the Linux way I know.
Oh, and if I can get a ZX Spectrum emulator on it, that would be cool, as my brother is a Jet Set Willy level designer.
I'm happy living in the past (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, on my latest desktop machines, I still use the same setup (although on a newer version of Linux). I had to copy over my old startup files to get the newer RedHat to fire up a desktop that looks like what I was used to. I also use this on a couple of 486's I have.
With this setup, I get multiple screens if I want, a very thin title bar at the bottom (so it doesn't take up much real estate, very important to me), and I have programmed various function key combinations to warp to (and bring to the foreground) the various windows I use:
The sysadmin in my dept laughed when I told him about all that, but a few days later he told me he'd done the same thing, mapping a zillion function keys. Once you use them a bit and remember them, it's so much faster than the mouse (and he probably has about as much aversion to the mouse as I do).
I tried to do all this function key mapping under Gnome a year or two ago, but couldn't figure out how to do it, so I gave up on it. Anyway, the stuff I do works fine under fvwm2 / Another Level, so there's nothing driving me to switch.
Amen! (Score:2)
Back to Icewm, and at least its some what snappier.
Side note, my sun blade 100 kept puking at random points of the suse install, that box will scream with kde when the linux is fully ported. BTW, damn it sun, support the creator 3d elite!
xwc seems to have disapeared (Score:3)
I normally don't care for such a thing. I get along fine with mv, bash/zsh's advanced replacements (for file in *.fred; do mv $file ${file%.fred}.barney; done), and a little perl script I cooked up to do regexp renaming (remv [turbogeek.org]). But occasionally a certain file management task comes along that leaves me begging for explorer.exe, and its in place edit, and its quick multifile selection that doesn't choke on quotes and spaces.
Anything out there for me?
Re:xwc seems to have disapeared (Score:2)
Re:xwc seems to have disapeared (Score:2)
Is its rename at least inline? Can I hit (eg) F2 and be editing the files name? No dialog. No clicking properties like in gmc. One button access to making the filename a text field. That's all I ask.
Re:xwc seems to have disapeared (Score:2)
What an awful app.
Some other options (Score:2, Interesting)
For a file manager, XFtree, which comes as part of XFce, is increadable. You will not believe what it can do. And if you need any kind of connection to a WinXX network, XFsamba is increadable. There is no better Samba tool. Period. rox is good too, though.
Dillo was mentioned and it is worth having a look at. It's very usable if you don't need frame support.
Someone mentioned running text based tools as an option. I would have to say that the #1 file manager I use is mc in an xterm. And links in an xterm does great for web stuff.
very on-topic! (Score:3, Interesting)
First thing I did was clear some room and d/l some floppy images and install debian ( for the first time! )
Anyway, i'm used to kde. so I apt-get kde. When i boot into it UGH! it's slower than any computer i've ever used before!
The big problem is the hard disk. I would wager it's slower than that of most 386's. It's CRAP. If the swap fills up more than 10MB that's it. it immediately begins to crawl slower than a slug over the salt plains.
I had to apt-get blackbox and give that a go. It worked a charm. But, still a little disheartened by konqueror, which as it turns out, is more ram hungry than IE5, I decided to find another web browser. I found Dillo! Dillo is awesome. It's got some problems rendering and doesnt support any advanced features, but what do you want for 97k? I've been using it ever since. Even with several windows open it doesn't even touch swap!
I also found that gtk programs like gaim are much less resource intensive than their kde equivalents.
on a side note. Debian is awesome. My jaw dropped when i started using apt-get. Also, the distro seems very well put together. I love the little touches like the menu program which controls menus in all the WMs and DEs. Just using debian on this laptop has already made me vow to switch away from mandrake when i get back to my normal box. It's very weird that a distribution put together by volunteers has turned out to be my favourite, I've tried many others before sticking with mandrake because it's what i give out to my friends.
Another side note. Although i hate windows, win95 actually runs quite well on this machine. It's crap but it's lean i guess.
Linux Developers read this (Score:2, Flamebait)
Every Developer should read this list aloud to themselves 20 to 100 times a day and live as if it were immutable law. If they did, the idea of linux gaining a noticable share of the consumer market would be much closer to reality.
JFMILLER
p.s. for those of you who will claim that Linux is only for those who can figure out how to use it, I say to you, "You are not numerous enought to be signifacant in any world but your own"
Wordperfect 8, Enlightenment (Score:2, Interesting)
Enlightenment (yes, I can run E without Gnome or any other other desktop for that matter on top). Themes for E, I think, are visually very appealing compared to IceWM. E doesn't have a taskbar like IceWM, you really have to rely on all your mouse buttons (left, middle and right) for app menus to pop-up. But I like this aspect since it keeps the desktop very clean.
Wordperfect 8.0. There is still wp8 tar.gz files floating around there on the net to install. It's free for personal use and although it's not a full suite like StarOffice or the like, it still is fast and powerful. Because it's an older piece of software, there may be some problems with running it in newer rpm based distros. You'll have to install older glibc libs and ld-configs--they'll take care of that problem.
Although it doesn't quite count as a word processor, LaTeX is well worth the effort to learn! Add this to pybliographer and bibtex and you have a setup that rivals Windows with Word and EndNote any day.
He's right about text editors and user loyalties. I'm just nuts over my emacs (also another piece of software well worth learning).
I used to use Eterm as my terminal, but has been supplanted by his choice, rxvt.
For the web browser, if I can't use lynx, I usually use Netscape 4. Just about all the other browsers can't compare in speed and functionality.
For the mail client, nothing beats Pine. I'm paranoid over all the email viruses being propagated by Outlook and clients similar to it. My motto is, "if it can't be sent as text, then it shouldn't be sent as email."
I don't use KDE--it's too bloated for my system. Although I have Gnome installed, it's really just for the libs to run Gnome software such as gkrellm, gaim and pybliographer.
stick with plain X11 and screen-oriented pgms (Score:4, Informative)
If you want some graphics and multiple windows, X11 is actually not that heavy-weight, although Gnome and KDE are. Consider running plain X11 with "twm", "fvwm", or Oroborus [blueyonder.co.uk]. Of those, "twm" is ubiquitous, while oroborus is a little more modern. For minimal graphical web browsing, consider the "dillo" web browser, although it won't work on complex sites. You could also download Opera [operasoft.com], although it's commercial.
Ratpoison (Score:3, Informative)
Here's a snippet of info from top(1) after I tried running a few of the "lightweight" window managers mentioned here (btw, thanks to whoever mentioned fluxbox, looks good):
PID USER PRI NI SIZE RSS SHARE S %CPU %MEM TIME COMMAND
26154 pete 10 0 3076 3076 1872 S 0.0 0.5 0:01 sawfish
26009 pete 9 0 1872 1872 1332 S 0.0 0.3 0:00 fluxbox
26124 pete 11 0 1816 1816 1260 S 0.0 0.3 0:00 icewm
26059 pete 9 0 1648 1648 1192 S 0.0 0.3 0:00 blackbox
26094 pete 10 0 1528 1528 1012 S 0.0 0.2 0:01 fvwm2
20798 pete 9 0 944 944 808 S 0.0 0.1 0:00 ratpoison
Sorry if that's not terribly readable, but the important figures are SIZE, RSS and SHARE. Note that fvwm2, interestingly enough, appears even slimmer than blackbox (probably partly due to blackbox being written in C++). And, of course, note that ratpoison is significantly slimmer than any of them.
Of course, you may not be the sort of person that would appreciate ratpoison :) - but if you've
used screen(1) and like that, there's a good
chance you'll be able to absorb the ratpoison zen.
If you're the sort of person for whom screen real estate is all-important and you tend to use mainly terminals and a few browser windows, then give it a go - it combines extreme minimalism with useful functionality in a very nice way. No bullshit to get in your way.
Plus, it's the only WM I've ever used that I haven't had to configure at all before being productive with it... of course, that could be partly because there's very little about it to configure... :-)
Pete.
The One and Only King of Stripped Down Linux (Score:2, Interesting)
And it has quite a lot of extra packages (for subsequent floppy disks), such as gcc, emacs, or even X11.
But when it comes to be stripped down, you can't be more stripped than 1.44mb. (Actually, it's a 1.7mb superformat, but who's counting.)
You can check it out here [sunsite.dk]. For those who want to get to know the command line before installing Linux, it's something to consider.
Re:Yippee!!! (Score:2, Redundant)
Blackbox vs Ice, and some comments on programs (Score:5, Informative)
Blackbox is great, but it has been out of development for a while. It is a bit NeXt-ish but super lightweight, and quite attractive. There is current development on the same codebase under "fluxbox". A few guys got tired of waiting for improvements, and just went for it. I love open source... I use fluxbox on my p133 laptop w/ 32 mb of ram, and it works great.
Icewm can be made to look more win32-ish. I have used it on and off, and think it is ok. It seems slower on my system than blackbox or fluxbox.
If you really want minimal, check wmx or aewm++. They are pretty cool, but do not have many features (by design).
For mail, try sylpheed or mutt. sylpheed is a nice gui mail client, mutt is console.
For news try pan, or slrn etc. I use pan exclusively now, as it is acceptably fast and has great features.
rxvt is blindingly fast, as an xterm replacement, and aterm is quick with cool features. i use aterm.
try Feh for images. It is lightweight and powerful. The montage feature is uber hip.
nedit is a good editor, as is kde's kate. Vim always runs quick.
Get mess and mame for games, they are lightweight and run a million old console or arcade roms.
Good luck to you,
Cuchullain
PS: management of your system becomes an issue with slow boxes, try debian with dselect. It seems to kick right along even on my slow boxes.
Re:Yippee!!! (Score:2, Informative)
For comfortable familiarity with Windows and lightweight, IceWM wins hands down. If you want Real light weight, Blackbox or Sawfish are real good choices. If you want lots of Eyecandy, then GNOME or E. If you want fast and configurable, then Sawfish again.
Re:Yippee!!! (Score:2)
Re:What's wrong with DOS? (Score:3, Flamebait)
What's wrong with DOS?
I think I could give you a much shorter response by listing what's right with DOS:
Re:What's wrong with DOS? (Score:2)
try that with a dos floppy.
Re:What's wrong with DOS? (Score:2)
Re:What's wrong with DOS? (Score:2)
If you like Blackbox... (Score:2, Informative)
Hit freshmeat.net and search for Fluxbox. It's a spin-off of Blackbox with a couple twists that a lot of people like.
Re:okay... (Score:4, Funny)
Real me use cheerios and like it. No frills, but you get a nutritious breakfast.
Neither is PWM (was: blackbox is not lightweight.) (Score:2, Informative)
THIS [all-day-breakfast.com] and THIS [all-day-breakfast.com] shows what lightweight REALLY is when it comes to window managers.
All you need, nothing you don't
Re:Um (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Something's wrong here (Score:2, Interesting)
I'll agree with you that alot of these newer linux window managers are too slow, but I think this lies inherent in the nature of linux. There's many ways to do the same thing (take gtk/qt , etc for example) And everything has to be compatible with everything else so naturally programs will take up more ram and run slower (most noticibly in the window manager), but if we're dealing with a uniformed standard where there's only one way to do most things (windows) then alot of functionality is cut off.
I think it would be fine if everyone could agree on a uniformed standard for linux, and then progress from there. But then linux would become another windows and taht's the last thing we want.
Re:Something's wrong here (Score:2)
The typical X implementation is quite different. It has a portable codebase that runs on just about everything, so there much less hand-tuned assembly. It's not as popular, and has far less driver support, so lots of drawing primitives need to be done in software. Being network transparent, it has to serialize everything into a protocol messages.
Add all these up, X is slower. However, a good X implementation could avert all these problems. It's most typical implementations don't. Especially if you got it for free.
Re:Geek pride (Score:2)
>Using a stripped-down desktop because your box
>doesn't have enough horsepower is like ripping
>the back seats out of your Mustang instead of
>putting in a Paxton Novi 2000 supercharger.
Saying that is akin to saying we should send the 86 Jetta to the crusher because it isn't an 02 Passat.
In this case, it's like saying we should send the
67 convertible bug to the crusher.
I have a toshiba laptop that has taken many beatings and continues to be my primary travelling machine -- new dells and even a new toshiba have failed to meet my requirements of
battery life off the AC and resilience to abuse.
Are you saying I shouldn't bother trying to streamline the linux installation that's on there because it doesn't match your own agenda? Or are you trying to imply that it's an equal proposition for me to acquire some titanium cased
gigahertz notebook to replace the old toshiba that
would not die? If so, I'll let you know where to forward the check, or better yet, just ship me my new notebook. By the way, if you have a 64-65 mustang with or without back seats, send it to AZ care of me.
Re:Geek pride (Score:2)
No, exactly the opposite; it's saying that we should stick a better engine or a supercharger or dual exhaust and a bigger throttle body on that Jetta, instead of trying to make it faster by removing the bumpers and back seat to decrease the weight.
I have a toshiba laptop that has taken many beatings and continues to be my primary travelling machine -- new dells and even a new toshiba have failed to meet my requirements of
battery life off the AC and resilience to abuse.
And I have a slow laptop, too, with a too-small hard drive. But instead of giving up on a powerful desktop, I'm sticking in a bigger hard drive and more RAM, and if it were possible I'd put in a faster processor. Laptops are a weird case, though. Most PCs are desktops, and desktops are way more upgradeable. When it's a matter of a hundred dollars to make your machine more powerful, it doesn't make sense to give up functionality instead of adding power.
By the way, if you have a 64-65 mustang with or without back seats, send it to AZ care of me.
Sorry, 2001 Convertible, and you can't have it. You're welcome to a ride if you're ever in Orlando, though.
'stangs were beautiful from 64.5 to 78, ugly but powerful from 79 to 93, ok from 94 to 98, and effing gorgeous from 99 to present.
Re:Geek pride (Score:2)
>No, exactly the opposite; it's saying that we
>should stick a better engine or a supercharger
>or dual exhaust...[etc]
Well, in the case of obsolete pc hardware it's usually not an option to modify or upgrade it, as
these situations generally involve a choice between using it or not, and a zero dollar budget.
Even if I have $3000 for a new notebook, I do NOT have $500 or even $50 for memory and a disk drive for an old one!
What's hard to deal with is the fact that I remember running yggdrasl linux on that very same notebook when it was a current machine, when a P75 notebook was considered desirable, and it was
just fine then. I'm not trying to remove the bumpers and the seats from the CAR, I'm trying to
remove the steel rack from the roof and the dead body in the trunk (from the distribution).
When 16MB of RAM and a 500MB disk drive on a 386/40 was an expensive machine I ran linux with X11 and FVWM, and life was pretty good. That worked better for me than windows 3.11 on the same box. I'd be hard-pressed to put that
same system together today!
There's probably something important about the fact that I still take my 75MHZ toshiba satellite on business trips even though I have several *much* better portables...
Re:The only thing left out... (Score:3, Informative)
My .xinitrc:
Re:blackbox screenshots? (Score:2, Informative)
You are aware, of course, that with that much memory you would have no trouble running either GNOME or KDE. That ISN'T a low-end computer by any stretch of the imagination and if you want to see how any of this stuff really stacks up, you need to look at a machine several orders of magnitude older and slower.
Re:XWC (Score:2, Interesting)
I had been looking for a good GUI file manager for a long long time (yes, I love CLI but the mouse is faster when moving around 10,000 files). .
* gmc -- decent, slight bloat
* konqueror -- best file mamager but WAY too slow and bloated -- just like the rest of KDE -- I tried EVERYTHING to speed it up -- 686 compilation, objprelink even static linking -- ALWAYS slow!
* Nautilus -- don't even get me started.
* System G -- lacked features
I started to think that it was impossible to have a decent graphical file manager under linux that was fast -- and then this article came up. Nice. The only thing I have to figure out now is how to configure it to use the wheel mouse. . .
It was the same with web browsers until I found Opera:
* konqueror -- decent but slow
* Nautilus -- bloated to hell
* Mozilla -- I've given up with the hope that mozilla will ever be fast.
* galeon -- nice and quick front end, but the [mozilla] rendering still feels like I'm browsing drunk.
* Netscape 4 -- excellent, but crashes or locks up every 10th web page. I had to run gkrellm just to see when netscape was sucking up 100% CPU.
Same, too with office apps. .
* StarOffice -- You need a cray supercomputer and the patience of a monk to run it.
* KOffice -- just like the rest of KDE, good but slow.
* Applixware -- I've yet to 'purchase' it.
. .
* evolution -- the clear winner in functionality, but I just want a GUI mail reader, not somthing that opens 30 processes to manage my life.
* kmail -- slow and doesn't even uderstand IMAP _subscribed_ folders.
* Netscape 4 mail -- excellent, but crashes.
* Mozilla Mail -- just like the rest of mozilla, bloated to hell.
It was nice to see this article on a non-bloated desktop! Hopefully with these comments, this article and some more trial-and-error I'll find more apps to replace my bloated ones.