Mailinglist Archive: opensuse (1695 mails)
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Re: [opensuse] Re: General Poor quality of Opensuse
- From: Adam Tauno Williams <awilliam@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 09:28:26 -0400
- Message-id: <1247664506.5420.29.camel@linux-m3mt>
On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 4:53 AM, Per Jessen<per@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Ah, sorry about that. Yes, SODimms are still pricey in comparison.
You could probably do with a bit more RAM - PC100 DIMMs are notActually, the SODimms are. $25 for a PC100 256MB. However, that is a
really that expensive anymore.
moot point since that machine, a Thinkpad X21, has a Max RAM of 384MB.
The next model up, the X22, can go to 640MB. Just my luck.
The X21 is from late 2001; that is ~8 years old. It seems entirely
reasonable to be that such a machine is going to really struggle to run
a current desktop install. Expecting a five year life span from a
computer is the bench mark I hear most often.
Or buy a new desktop machine - I bought two 2nd hand Dell Optiplex'es
just the other day for use as office machines. 2.4GHz Celerons with
512M RAM. I added another 512M to both, and each machine was still
only CHF60.
I use a 1.6GHz P4 / 1.2GB RAM for a desktop and performance is
reasonable, not great. But that is about to slide over the five year
mark. Upgrading the video card helped *A LOT*.
I have an E1200 overclocked to 3.2Ghz with 2GB RAM overclocked to
1Ghz. Honestly, it gets annoying to be told I need to buy new.
Unless the drives or GPU are seriously lame I don't see why performance
on such a box wouldn't be entirely adequate. Unfortunately CPU/RAM
isn't the entire performance equation. I've see 'older' machines
perform pretty well while newer and [theoretically] faster machines are
dogs.
Apologies, I didn't quite mean it like that - I was trying to make a
friendly suggestion that you are perhaps expecting too much from a
P3/700 with 384M RAM as a desktop.
Yes.
I am all for maintaining support for older hardware, but at some point
the older hardware will/must be left behind. Especially for a desktop
machine/distro, where it's difficult to utilize the new multi-cores
with a couple of gigabyte and make it run on e.g. a P3 with 384Mb at
the same time.
It is also just the times. AJAX websites and other content just require
more horsepower - even to browse the web. [Which is kind of the myth
behind using Google Docs or that ilk to save old machines - it does not
work as web applications are horribly horribly horribly inefficient].
The benchmarking we've done in-house shows that the web browser is one
of the most resource intensive applications people run, much more so
than their office suite or groupware client.
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