On Sun, March 1, 2009 12:48 pm, Viktor Mastoridis wrote: > I've got a MacBook with 1.83 Ghz Intel Core Duo and 512 MB ram. > > I would like to install Linux on it (single or dualboot with Mac). > I would like something lightweight, as I can't upgrade the memory. I've used a few lightweight distros like DamnSmallLinux, Puppy Linux, Vector Linux... and they're not bad. Since they're not "main-stream," though, they don't get updated as quickly as I would prefer. (...but maybe I didn't give them a chance...) In my experience, most main-stream distros can be made relatively lightweight by: * Choosing a different Desktop environment. Gnome and KDE are nicely fully-featured... but have a lot of extra fluff running in the background. Switch to something like Fluxbox, IceWM, FVWM, or (if you're really hard-core) blackbox. * Disable and uninstall extra stuff that you don't need. If you don't need a mail server, NFS, Samba, CUPS, Apache, HAL, dbus, etc. -- Disable or uninstall them. If you only need them occasionally, enable them only when you need them. * Applications: Instead of the huge OpenOffice... try Gnumeric (spreadsheet) and Abiword (word processor). I run several desktops with 500 to 800Mhz processors and 192 to 384 MB of RAM. I use Debian-based OS's (Debian, Ubuntu, and 64 Studio) on them. I get good performace out of them, even with Gnome or KDE. (But I usually use blackbox and get better than good performance.) I use one of the machines for audio. HTH, Gabriel -- G a b r i e l M B e d d i n g f i e l d _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user