Bram Kaandorp
Master Poster
I'm using Lubuntu now, is Mint much more resource-hungry?
I'd like to give it a go.
LXDE is less resource hungry than Gnome, so I'd say that Lubuntu is the more demanding one.
I'm using Lubuntu now, is Mint much more resource-hungry?
I'd like to give it a go.
I wonder what it was about Ubuntu 11.10 that was giving the CPU a flogging. Pardus 2011 is much less demanding it seems.
What are the biggest advantages you experienced in using Unity over Gnome 2?
Unfortunately GNOME 3 failed to start properly and started in the fallback mode.
This most likely means your system (graphics hardware or driver) is not capable of delivering the full GNOME 3 experience.
LXDE is less resource hungry than Gnome, so I'd say that Lubuntu is the more demanding one.
I wonder what it was about Ubuntu 11.10 that was giving the CPU a flogging. Pardus 2011 is much less demanding it seems.
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We were just talking about Unity. Could that be it? It uses compositing, which is usually pretty demanding, so maybe that's it.
I actually prefer XFCE over LXDE, so Xubuntu was my "-buntu" of choice for netbooks and old, resource-deficient hardware. Last year I tried out Crunchbang Linux (uses the lightweight Openbox) and I really like that UI, so that's the distro I've been sticking with for my netbook.
I use the conky on all my machines. I have my conky set up to display two lists of top threads: the top 10 most CPU-intensive, and the top 10 most RAM-intensive, so I can see at a glance what is eating the most resources.
Ugh. I really don't like Unity. I wish they'd just stuck to regular old Gnome. Reminds me of when KDE4 came out. Just a lot of layered garbage in the UI that is totally unnecessary and impedes workflow.
You don't need compositing. It's totally display-only, with no user interaction whatsoever.
It does poll the system regularly and updates the display accordingly, and you can specify the frequency for that. Conky runs very lean if you set the resource polling to a low enough frequency. The conky scripting language is extremely easy to hack, and you can also use or code plugins in a variety of languages to add various functionalities and fancy display effects (like Internet weather reports, rendering pie charts, etc.). As I said, I use it on all my machines, even netbooks. Here's a pic of my netbook conky running in Crunchbang Linux:
(beautiful image)
You can see both conky instances (the system monitor on the left and the date/time/weather on the right) on the "top" list for CPU hoggage, probably because I caught it in the process of polling and grabbing weather data at the moment I pulled the screengrab.
If you find XFCE too lean, then stay away from OpenBox. It's pared down to the absolute minimum.
Netbook Remix was awesome. A friend of mine (non-computer techie type) uses it all the time and she loves it. I can even see Unity being alright for netbooks or maybe tablets, but I found it extremely annoying to have on a desktop machine. I actually prefer traditional desktop environments even for netbooks.
In Ubuntu 11.04, I just keep "traditional Gnome" selected in the Sessions menu at the login screen.
Even better, I just remove Unity. I never use it, so why keep it around, right?
I've run into a weird problem though.
My windows are "fixed". As in They stick to the top of the screen.
The top bar seems to have disappeared, so I cant maximize or minimize windows.
I think it happened when I played with the compiz configuration.But I'm not sure.
You must have turned off Window Decorations.
I think it's called "Move Window"...
While you're at it, you may want to make sure "Resize Window" is checked as well...
It seems that I fall outside the usual Linux stereo-types.
I like simplicity and good design, and I like to keep using my hardware for a long time.
Unlike most Linux fans, I'm not very computer literate at all. I don't even know the specs of my system by heart.
Linux has actually reached the point where someone like me can stick a DVD in a machine, choose a language and a keyboard lay out. And fifteen minutes later have a low-budget Apple.
With Ubuntu, I still had to figure out how to get Flash to work and get codecs (a major hurdle for lame users, underestimated by computer literate people).
With Mint, I literally didn't have to do anything. It just works.
You'd be surprised how many Linux users aren't like most Linux fans.
I tend to use the same computer for some time as well, and even though I know how much RAM I have, how fast my processor is and what kind of graphics card I have, I don't know exactly how that affects everything.
At this point, many Linux distros are aimed at user friendliness, meaning that the old "Linux is for geeks" meme is no longer very apt.