--- In [email protected], babu c k <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thank you very much for your reply Jeanette . But only upgrading of
RAM will boost up my system performance ?
> 
 > Jeanette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:          Jeanette wrote:
> 
> Babu you have plenty of processor but the 256 mb of ram is on the low 
> side. You could run gnome or kde desktop but it will be slow.
> 
> I would look into something like xubuntu which is easy to use and uses 
> the XFCE desktop which is lower in resources.
> 
> If you were to add another 256 mb of ram you could run just about any 
> linux. I like Ubuntu or Kubuntu.
> 
> Babu wrote:
> 
> > 
> > 
> > sir,
> > i wanna know which linux is good for me. I have a 32 bit processor
> > with 256 ddr ram and 1.7 ghz processor.
> > i will be very thankful to u if u tel me which latest version of linux
> > will be well suitable for me.

 Indeed Babu, 256mb of RAM is typically minimal for systems these
days... (opinion only) but Jeanette is correct a memory
upgrade/addition on any machine (no matter the OS) will help
performance. This is typically the first thing one looks at when
trouble shooting system degredation or slugishness.
 
That aside (k)ubuntu will "run" on a system with only 256mb of ram, as
will most all distributions. Just dont expect blazing fast operations.
   I think we could all drone on and on about what distribution to
use, so heres a suggestion: Research, apply the idea of skill level,
learning curve, and what it is you want to accomplish. Then decide.
LINUX has come a long way in all cases. And (again) will work great on
most any PC/PPC system with little to no performance degredation. The
top distributions for new users are (k)ubuntu, freespire, and Mepis.
These are designed to run out of the box and put you right in the
desktop environment. 

Regards



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