[04:23] (Photo, 1280x575) https://i.imgur.com/O8uSkPw.jpg hello, which one is showing my ram usage ? [04:28] @devikri [], Does RSS show the use of RAM? [04:29] devikri, what tool are you using? [04:29] @guiverc [ devikri, what tool are you using?], lxtask [04:30] okay, sorry I should probably have guessed that.. [04:32] * guiverc doesn't have a 18.04/LXDE system running; so having to look up details online [04:33] I usually use htop, and this is my first time using lxtask [04:34] I was hoping to find out what RSS stood for, I can't find the answer on lxde.org [04:36] oke thx guivere [04:40] even the source code refers to it as RSS; I could only guess sorry [04:42] RSS usually means Resident Set Size in posix/unix ... but I can't confirm sorry (memory allocated to a process and is in ram) [04:44] @guiverc [ RSS usually means Resident Set Size in posix/unix ... but I can't conf …], at least this helps 😁😁😁 thx [04:45] :) === oleg is now known as Guest30795 [16:10] I sold my laptop, so I need t bring back to life my old one [16:11] will lubunutu run in 1GB ram? [16:12] Genuine Intel(R) CPU T2400 @ 1.83GHz === me is now known as Guest33003 [16:46] Is there any utility to switch between amd and intel graphics on Ubuntu ? [16:49] The_LoudSpeaker, try DRI_PRIME=1 your app [17:03] Okay. But I was looking for a gui to enable/disable the amd card. Like nvdia. Nvdia provides a good gui. [17:06] it's disabled by default and it's enabled by DRI_PRIME=1, other than that, your bios might provide the settings which card to enable/disable. === lubuntu is now known as Guest14123 [18:34] ping === FrankF1 is now known as FrankF [21:26] hello which version is more lightweight, lubuntu or xubuntu? [21:31] upupbb-user1: the "l" in lubuntu stands for it, soooooo [21:32] so lubuntu [21:32] I'm downloading, thing my hardware is really old. [21:32] 64 bit at least? [21:32] no :( [21:33] Genuine Intel(R) CPU T2400 @ 1.83GHz 1GB RAM HDD 80GB [21:33] oh yeah well that's a problem [21:33] No candidate? [21:33] at least looking into the long term [21:33] Lubuntu 18.04 LTS works with x86 (i386/686); supported until 2021-April [21:33] for now, 18.04 will do the trick, but you won't be able to go any further [21:33] ^ what he said [21:34] I see [21:34] Any more lightweight distro you guys recommend? [21:34] * wxl shrugs [21:35] Xubuntu is another choice; again supported until 2021-April. It's only slightly heavier [21:35] but I mean more lightweight than lubuntu, I have read about slitaz, puppy, bohdi [21:36] you will have same problem with all *buntu for 32 bit suport. [21:36] The only other choice in my mind would be pure debian. [21:36] oh my i'd avoid puppy like the plague [21:36] bodhi is an ubuntu derivative afaik so it will suffer the same problem [21:37] maybe arch? [21:37] nope, sorry [21:37] I tested Lubuntu up to 19.04 using a single-core pentium M 1gb box from ~15 years ago. Lubuntu is pretty good [21:37] there's a "community derivative" arch linux 32 but i'm not sure what that means [21:38] https://archlinux32.org/ [21:38] of course arch is not "easy" per se [21:40] arch is almost a white page, you need to install everything you want/need. [21:40] right [21:40] which means you can keep it really slim, but it also means it's not easy