I happen to be a big fan of the KDE 4 series and KDE 4.3 is the best yet. I'm running an LTSP setup using an old Ubuntu 7.10 LTSP setup at a small company with about 6 constant users. They do simple things like browse the Internet, check email, and created/edit documents off the LAN using OpenOffice.org. However, since this version of Linux is unsupported and a bit behind, I want to move away from Ubuntu/GNOME and use openSUSE/KDE. The problem is that I have very low-end thin clients (400Mhz VIA processor, 32MB RAM, VIA graphics with shared memory, etc.) and it makes it a challenge to do so. Believe it or not, KDE 4 seems to out perform GNOME as far as responsiveness (started out trying GNOME and switched to KDE) and is certainly usable. My thin client has frozen up a couple of times when using Firefox, OpenOffice.org, etc. together, but changing the color depth to 16 seems to have helped. My question is, are there additional things I can do to KDE to help save some RAM on the thin clients? Is there a way to tweak KDE to use simpler graphics such as turning off the glow when hovering over folders, or using wire-frame outlines when dragging windows; sort of like "reduced resources" in GNOME's GConf? Anthony -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org