Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 29th Sep 2005 10:32 UTC
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RE[2]: MIT just might do it...
by zima on Thu 29th Sep 2005 13:11
in reply to "RE: MIT just might do it..."
But it's too heavy for those machines...remember, they're made as cheap as possible, but still useable. Which means probably 128MB of RAM or something like that...FURTHERMORE, there's one very important difference to our typical laptops/desktops - swap is to be avoided at all costs (flash based - limited number of read/writes and...slow). Personally, I would modify the kernel/desktop enviroment (or something) that it will not allow launching of new apps when physical memory limit is closing in (eventually - allow, but display something like "to assure longevity of your laptop, please close applications you're not using)
BTW, where does this 70% number come from?
RE[3]: MIT just might do it...
by on Thu 29th Sep 2005 14:59
in reply to "RE[2]: MIT just might do it..."
RE[2]: MIT just might do it...
by on Thu 29th Sep 2005 14:57
in reply to "RE: MIT just might do it..."



Member since:
2005-07-15
kde is just the most used desktop under linux....
about 70% of the market under linux