Robb
The Royal Latin School wrote:
My graphics card is inbuilt on the mother board, and off hand I couldn't tell you, I have 32MB of ram and an 8GB hard drive, with (supposedly)
5GB
assigned to Linux, but it thinks it's got about 1. Which is fine, 'cos I'll get the rest back when I've finished fiddling about and then do it
The plan is thqat my new computer will have at least 256MB RAM.......but
thats another story.
I was working on the assumption that because Windows 95 and Office (what I
usually use at home) can survive on 16MB (what I had last week, the rest I
"borrowed" from work"), then a simple Linux GUI would as well.......
I think I have S3 chips.....I could install a graphics card, but my poor old
P120 with the blown up power supply, blown up parallel port, two borken
floppy drives, given up PCI slot, probably couldn't cope anymore, which is
why the new computer is in build process.......
Configuration of X windows wasn't that hard, and I'm quite happy with it.
(They all look the same to me anyway......and it's how it runs the things
underneath it, not what it looks like.....)
Regards,
Robb Bloomfield
----- Original Message -----
From: Richard
The built in chips can be a bit strange at times. You really need to plug in a separate graphics card. That might be an S3 or ATI card. First time configuration of X-windows can be difficult. But, as other people have said, first time installation of Microsoft products can be difficult as well :)
I've also had a lot of trouble with these chips under Win 95/98/2000/NT4 and some of the comments I've heard from PC shop technicians aren't really repeatable here.
32Mb of RAM is somewhat on the mean side. This is why your hard drive is grinding. If I run MS Windows I use 128Mb of RAM. This allows MS Office to run without problems. If you want to run X-windows and an office suite you should use at least 64Mb of RAM. I've also met people who insist that 256Mb is the minimum. However, in the run up to Christmas the Taiwanese RAM people have jacked up the prices up to maximise profits. So, 64Mb might be all that you can afford ?
Thanks
-- Richard