LinuxQuestions.org
Help answer threads with 0 replies.
Home Forums Tutorials Articles Register
Go Back   LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Laptop and Netbook
User Name
Password
Linux - Laptop and Netbook Having a problem installing or configuring Linux on your laptop? Need help running Linux on your netbook? This forum is for you. This forum is for any topics relating to Linux and either traditional laptops or netbooks (such as the Asus EEE PC, Everex CloudBook or MSI Wind).

Notices


Reply
  Search this Thread
Old 03-26-2006, 05:10 PM   #1
pkozub
Member
 
Registered: Nov 2005
Location: Bloomington, IN
Distribution: SuSE
Posts: 39

Rep: Reputation: 15
Question Streamlining my notebook


I put SuSE 9.1 on my backup notebook yesterday. Here's what the specs are:

GATEWAY SOLO 5100XL NOTEBOOK COMPUTER
- Chips & Technologies graphics adapter - 2 MB
- 5 GB Hard Disk Drive
- 3.5" FD (does not write for some reason...)
- XGA display
- Touchpad
- 80 MB of RAM
- Pentium II Mobile processor at 233 MHz

I need to be able to use OpenOffice.org and a thumbdrive (that's why I chose SuSE 9.1). Some festive wallpaper would be nice too, as would KDE. I do not need sound, though the sound card has not worked for about three months anyway.

I also need to be able to sync my Tungsten T|5 via USB.

To be brief, I need to know if there is anything I can do to streamline the system so that it runs faster. I know in Windows there are drivers that one can disable, and on the Mac you can turn off extensions. What is the linux equivalent? What is recommended in terms of memory and processor hogs that I can disable?

I need to use this thing at school, so suspend/resume is also a must.

Thanks,
pck
 
Old 03-27-2006, 11:24 AM   #2
aryys
LQ Newbie
 
Registered: Mar 2006
Location: london, england
Distribution: Fedora 12, Mandriva 2010, FreeBSD 7.2, Slackware 13, OpenBSD 3.7
Posts: 29

Rep: Reputation: 16
the suspend/resume function can be enabled with the acpi module, works really well in suse 10, not sure about the earlier versions,
kde and nice wallpapers are good for eyecandy etc but it eats performance like no-ones business,might drag a bit on your machine.
definatly recompile the kernel to take out drivers you don't want to start up, edit the files in /etc/init.d, so they wont start unless you tell them to (just the non-essential progs mind you)

hope that helps a bit
 
Old 03-27-2006, 12:17 PM   #3
pnellesen
Member
 
Registered: Oct 2004
Location: Missouri, USA
Distribution: Slackware 12.2, Xubuntu 9.10
Posts: 371

Rep: Reputation: 31
If there's any possible way to add more RAM, do it. That's probably the most significant thing you can do to speed things up. I've got an ancient Compaq laptop that I use (very) occasionally with 96MB, and it's still pretty slow when I want to use something like FireFox. Usable, but slow. Haven't tried OpenOffice on it, so I can't speak to that, but I'd imagine that without additional RAM, you're only going to see minimal performance increases via kernel recompile.
 
Old 03-27-2006, 04:19 PM   #4
lestoil
Member
 
Registered: Apr 2004
Location: new york
Distribution: win2k,ubuntu,sw13,arch,centos5.3
Posts: 815

Rep: Reputation: 31
your lappy has 2 mem. slots for max 144MB ram. Memory would be most effective purchase. Have swap of 250MB. Get latest BIOS. Review SuSe 9.x install manual for minimal install and add pkgs you want or work backwards and remove pkgs from normal install. Do you need/want full openoffice2?
Review SuSe 9.x hcl. Try latest SuSe kernel that supports hw you want. If you can, use xfce instead of gnome or kde to save on resources. Check linux-on-laptops and SuSe forums. Good luck.
 
Old 03-27-2006, 05:37 PM   #5
dracolich
Senior Member
 
Registered: Jul 2005
Distribution: Slackware
Posts: 1,274

Rep: Reputation: 63
Although eye candy is nice, for this machine if it's not necessary than you might consider a smaller WM like XFCE or ICEWM. KDE is the most full-features WM so it needs the most memory. I wouldn't even try to run KDE with less than 128MB RAM. With you're hardware I think a setup like XFCE running OOo with nothing else open would be just a bit slow but plenty usable.

Another thing to look at for increasing performance would be services that load at startup. If there's anything you don't need turn them off to free up more memory.
 
Old 03-28-2006, 03:09 PM   #6
pkozub
Member
 
Registered: Nov 2005
Location: Bloomington, IN
Distribution: SuSE
Posts: 39

Original Poster
Rep: Reputation: 15
Quote:
Originally Posted by dracolich

Another thing to look at for increasing performance would be services that load at startup. If there's anything you don't need turn them off to free up more memory.
I'm still new to this. Where do I go to do that?


Suffice it to say I'm beginning to appreciate TWM...
 
  


Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off



Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Streamlining my notebook pkozub Linux - Laptop and Netbook 1 03-26-2006 05:16 PM
PC notebook or Mac Notebook? thebover Linux - General 8 10-08-2004 03:02 AM
New HP Notebook? carlosinfl Linux - Laptop and Netbook 6 09-23-2004 09:42 PM
New Notebook? thom Linux - Hardware 2 10-07-2003 04:29 PM
Help with notebook SoulSe Linux - Hardware 13 03-30-2003 06:08 PM

LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Laptop and Netbook

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:35 PM.

Main Menu
Advertisement
My LQ
Write for LQ
LinuxQuestions.org is looking for people interested in writing Editorials, Articles, Reviews, and more. If you'd like to contribute content, let us know.
Main Menu
Syndicate
RSS1  Latest Threads
RSS1  LQ News
Twitter: @linuxquestions
Open Source Consulting | Domain Registration