I want to run just a few applications : browser+ text editor+personal info management apps on the Acer netbook. Is there a benchmark of which linux distro will run fastest? asked 07 Aug '10, 01:54 iceman |
I have been playing with a variant of Puppy called BrowserLinux on my Asus EeePC 701 4G. It is only 78 megabytes or so and comes in a Firefox flavour or a Chrome flavour. It runs from a USB stick and comes with a browser, a text editor, a small music player and not much else. Tiny and fast. Check it out here: http://www.browserlinux.com/ You can also create a file to save your settings and bookmarks on your computer, which BrowserLinusx will find and load up on each boot. Cheers from Guelph, Ontario. :) answered 18 Aug '10, 01:34 Freshmeadow |
O'Reilly has an excellent article on this. The fact is that it varies greatly depending on how you set up your system. No one is going to be able to give you a concrete answer, simply because even the default package varies greatly between distros, some include OpenOffice, others simply vi. You'll need to do a little legwork into this, and look at which packages you want, and which distribution will give you exactly what you want, with as little fluff or bloat as possible. As the article below mentions slackware is a pretty good minimal install, but you do sacrifice the interface in some aspects. You should also look into window managers as the smaller ones, ie. xfce, and fluxbox are quicker, but less aesthetically appealing than gnome or kde to most people. http://broadcast.oreilly.com/2009/03/linux-performance-different-di.html answered 09 Aug '10, 04:21 rfelsburg ♦ |
The speed of your system depends greatly on the applications which you are running. Therefore, to increase the speed of your netbook, you will want to remove as many unwanted programs as possible without loosing the functionality that you need. That means that you might want a distro that is built around your specific needs. If you really wanted good performance, you could start with a minimal distro such as Arch Linux and build it up to do just what you want. However, it might be better to simply find one that's suited to your needs and then remove excess programs and adjust it to run faster. While there may be a benchmark out there somewhere as to which distros run fastest out of the box, that will necessarily change as you install programs. Personally, I run Arch Linux when I just need the basics, which is what you describe. Even a GUI is optional, but can easily be installed. Speaking of GUIs, your choice of desktop environment (or lack thereof) is a huge factor. If you don't need the functionality of Gnome, try XCFE, or perhaps something even lighter answered 07 Aug '10, 05:31 kainosnous |
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