Thanks everybody! You've helped me alot! I will always notice your instructions.
Regards, Hung 2010/8/21 Phillip Whiteside <[email protected]> > To have a application considered for inclusion it must be stable, use no > disk space to install and use no RAM or CPU time when running. If it meets > all those of those, AND is in the official Ubuntu Repositories there will be > a vote held. (yes, it really does seem like that when proposing a new > included application). > > If you find a candidate that you feel meets most of the above, please do > put it forward. Even if it does not get included on the release it would be > possible to "give it a mention" in the same way that Deadbeef is as lean, > mean and keen music player, liked by many but not in the official repos. > > I'm sure this is documented somewhere, but reboot your system up, let it > settle and issue *free* and *top* in the terminal window > https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lubuntu/DocumentationHelp/LXTerminal > Make a note of of memory > total used free shared buffers cached > Mem: 1534516 1072532 *461984* 0 113556 > 457816 > > Free memory is in *bold* > > And CPU usage > > Tasks: 134 total, 1 running, 133 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie > Cpu(s): *1.3%us,* > > Take a note of where the memory and CPU usage is (*bold*), then go to > install the programme. > If at this point it wants to bring in a lot additional parts, it is > unlikely to pass the requirements. > > If it passes that step, then you can, if you wish install it [1] > and reboot. then issue the *free* and *top* command again to ensure the > new program is not 'eating up memory' or CPU usage > > Start using the application for a little while then issue the commands > again and you can see what it is using, both in memory and CPU time. > > Regards, > Phill. > [1] when installing use apt-get, or a ppa in order to remove a package from > your system if you wish it gone. > > P.S. I've seen many discussions on this, if lubuntu could get a standard > way of testing of an application I think it is worth us having a > 'bench-mark'. > > > On Fri, Aug 20, 2010 at 9:51 PM, Julien Lavergne <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Le vendredi 20 août 2010 à 12:53 +0700, Duy Hùng Trần a écrit : >> > When I introduce Lubuntu to people in my country, I'm sure the most >> > asked questions are: "How to ... in Lubuntu?", "What software to ... >> > in Lubuntu?". Most people in Vietnam still use Microsoft Windows, they >> > don't know about Linux, about Ubuntu or Lubuntu, but they are ready to >> > try something new, to try Linux and the most important thing they want >> > to know is their jobs in Windows would be able to be done in >> > Lubuntu/Linux or not. >> > There are many applications in Ubuntu repository that I could suggest >> > them to people but I really don't how to recognize those applications >> > are lightweight and suitable for Lubuntu, for their computers or not. >> > Do we have any tip to choose the right applications for Lubuntu? >> >> It's difficult to say before testing them :) >> >> In Lubuntu, we have some criteria for applications we want to include : >> - Low memory usage >> - Low system usage (CPU, hard-disk i/o ...) >> - Low dependencies >> - Still fast :) >> >> As you see, you can't define them, without testing the application :) >> >> Regards, >> Julien Lavergne >> >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-desktop >> Post to : [email protected] >> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~lubuntu-desktop >> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp >> > >
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