Re: gtk+ and gtk-engines slow
- From: Michiel Toneman <toneman slimbit demon nl>
- To: Johan Groth <jgroth xpress se>
- cc: gnome-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: gtk+ and gtk-engines slow
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1999 23:40:29 +0100 (CET)
On Mon, 25 Jan 1999, Johan Groth wrote:
> >
> > No, I think the point was that one should be able to install GNOME onto
> > just about any kind of decent machine and expect it to run.
>
> Which leaves us the following question: What is a decent machine; a 33
> MHz 386 with 16 MB or a 66MHz 486 DX2 32 MB or a 100MHz 486 DX4 with 32
> MB or does it have to be a 90 MHz P5 with 64 MB?
>
> ///Johan
I think we should make this a poll of sorts. Personally I think we
should strive to have gnome running comfortably on a 486dxX (X)XX with
24Mb.
The reasoning is as follows:
- These machines are very, very common and cheap. Therefore of
interest for educational purposes.
- A very common configuration around this time was:
486DX something-or-other
340-500Mb HD
8Mb RAM (perfect for Win3.11)
- The problem is therefore of insufficient RAM. Unfortunately,
this was the transitional period between 30-pin and 72-pin
SIMMs, existing in parity/non-parity varieties, with motherboards
sometimes accepting EDO, sometimes not :( Also not all RAM
configs were allowed.
- The easiest way to upgrade these machines is by using one 16Mb
SIMM to create a workable Linux box. Any more means having to
free up slots by chucking out already installed memory, or
running into trouble because the motherboard doesn't like
32Mb SIMMS (many didn't). There is one exception, when there
are 8 30-pin slots all filled with 1Mb SIMMs, in which case
you are screwed, because you will have to ditch 4 1Mb SIMMs.
(Although then you can make 20Mb or 32Mb fairly easily)
- A 386 usually needs too many upgrades to become useable. I.e.
usually 80Mb disk, 2/4Mb ram, lousy videocard. You can get a
fast 486 with the above configuration for the upgrade cost.
With a 486, processor speed should be secondary to memory, and
anything DX should do.
- I'd say $200 for such a configuration should be reasonable.
Now there's a cheap workstation ;-)
Greetings,
Michiel Toneman
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