Can anyone who uses one of these machine advise me
how far the usual services are relevant for a netbook ?
-- hald (+dbus) vixie-cron slocate run on my desktop machine,
but don't seem necessary for a netbook which I wb using only occasionally;
I have installed sysklogd , which seems useful in case of problems.
Also, what do people use to monitor the battery ?
And what's best for the webcam ?
Thanks again for the advice so far: I hope my reports are helpful to others.
--
========================,,============================================
SUPPORT ___________//___, Philip Webb
ELECTRIC /] [] [] [] [] []| Cities Centre, University of Toronto
TRANSIT `-O----------O---' purslowatchassdotutorontodotca
Better replace vixie-cron with fcron. fcron is more suitable for PCs
that don't run 24/7. Alternatively use anacron with vixie-cron.
I'd trash slocate completely. Especially when your toy has a cheap SSD.
If it doesn't, well, it all depends on whether you use locate regularly.
If not, trash it. If you use it, replace it with mlocate which should be
a bit faster on updating its DB.
I wouldn't run any kind of syslog unless you are currently debugging
your system. It will only spin up the disk/wear out the SSD.
Have a look at app-laptop/laptop-mode-tools and sys-power/powertop if
you haven't already.
hald might be useful/necessary for plug'n'play. It might also help with
external displays. dbus will most certainly be used by some desktop
application/environment.
Hope this helps
Florian Philipp
I'll look into them.
> I'd trash slocate completely. Especially when your toy has a cheap SSD.
No, 'H' stands for 'hard drive', as in a 160 GB HDD.
> If not, it all depends on whether you use locate regularly.
> If not, trash it. If you use it, replace it with mlocate
> which should be a bit faster on updating its DB.
I'll look into these.
> I wouldn't run any kind of syslog unless you are currently debugging
> your system. It will only spin up the disk/wear out the SSD.
It's not an SSD. I've been using the X log to get X working.
> Have a look at app-laptop/laptop-mode-tools
> and sys-power/powertop if you haven't already.
No, I haven't, but will.
> hald might be useful/necessary for plug'n'play.
> It might also help with external displays.
> dbus will most certainly be used by some desktop application/environment.
Both are required for X , which I found out after sending in my msg.
> Hope this helps
Yes, it's very useful: thanks as usual.
BTW I'm surprised how fast the little machine is compiling stuff:
it's faster than my 2003 machine & approaches my 2007 Core 2 Duo.
Also, there's a reference in a Gentoo Wiki article to hyperthreading,
which advises to configure multiple processing into the kernel.
Is this correct ? Is it safe ?
Be very careful with hyperthreading. It's one of those things that looked like
a good idea at the time and didn't really work out in practice.
There's a reason why so many CPUs these days are multi-core.
I always advise to disable hyper-threading first unless it's proven to be
beneficial. And the signal-to-noise ratio is gentoo-wiki is nowhere near as
high as some folks think
--
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
Yes, it doesn't seem correct to enable SMP on a 1-core CPU.
> The signal-to-noise ratio is gentoo-wiki
> is nowhere near as high as some folks think.
It can't be as bad as the Forum (grin).