NMGKugers, Akkana Peck writes: "My last laptop is a Celeron from about 2015 with 2G RAM (it cost less than $200 when it was new, and came with Linux). It's still quite usable and responsive with a lightweight window manager (Openbox). Firefox takes a while to start up but runs fine once it's up; same with programs like LibreOffice and qgis. Just don't run a big desktop and don't try to run several big programs at once.... I've tried to install Linux on a few older machines with <2G and that doesn't seem to be enough to run a modern browser without big lags -- presumably swapping. We have several Raspberry Pi 3 workstations at Los Alamos Makers (1Gb) and they work okay for learning programming languages like Python and Scratch and Arduino, but the browser (I think they use chromium) is quite laggy." While we who are familiar can establish work arounds or do our programming it is noted that the deficits of the machines described are clear and, like old shoes, comfortable by daily use and adjustment. I agree with Jared on this, we are not doing a friendly outreach or being encouraging to new normal users if we insist they make accommodations from the start. Alas, the old machines are good enough for programming and doing math, but for today's Internet and user expectations, No, not good enough. Thank you, Ted P. On Fri, Feb 7, 2020 at 8:51 AM Akkana Peck <akkana@shallowsky.com> wrote:
On Feb 6 2020 4:35 PM, Ted Pomeroy wrote:
NMGLugers, What do you consider system requirements in 2020?
On Thu, Feb 6, 2020 at 7:06 PM ABQLUG <community@abqlug.com> wrote:
In general I suggest getting a new laptop if you are on the 2nd core generation (Sandy Bridge) or older. If you are on a Celeron or Pentium
Ted Pomeroy writes:
NMGLugers & Jared, Thank you. Yes, an adequate CPU and about 8 GB ram seem required these days as the Internet has more embedded video and scripts of
It really depends on what you do and what desktop environment you prefer. My last laptop is a Celeron from about 2015 with 2G RAM (it cost less than $200 when it was new, and came with Linux). It's still quite usable and responsive with a lightweight window manager (Openbox). Firefox takes a while to start up but runs fine once it's up; same with programs like LibreOffice and qgis. Just don't run a big desktop and don't try to run several big programs at once.
That might be the limit, though. I've tried to install Linux on a few older machines with <2G and that doesn't seem to be enough to run a modern browser without big lags -- presumably swapping. We have several Raspberry Pi 3 workstations at Los Alamos Makers (1Gb) and they work okay for learning programming languages like Python and Scratch and Arduino, but the browser (I think they use chromium) is quite laggy.
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