Discussion:
nubuntu
JD
2007-05-05 12:37:26 UTC
Permalink
I just found this version of Ubuntu last evening
(http://www.nubuntu.org/about.php)

Has anyone here given this a try? It certainly looks interesting.
The screenshots show it as being configured with fluxbox (although I didn't
notice fluxbox in the list of packages).
If anyone here has given this a go, I'd appreciate your feedback.
Also, if anyone here has used xubuntu, I'd appreciate feedback on that front
as well. I have a laptop from my company that I am going to setup Ubuntu on
and would like (at least) to use Fluxbox with, but my skills at configuring
Fluxbox are not very good, so having a release of Ubuntu that includes would
probably enlighten me quite a bit.

Thanks for the input.

Jack
Liam Proven
2007-05-05 13:51:01 UTC
Permalink
Post by JD
I just found this version of Ubuntu last evening
(http://www.nubuntu.org/about.php)
Has anyone here given this a try? It certainly looks interesting.
The screenshots show it as being configured with fluxbox (although I didn't
notice fluxbox in the list of packages).
If anyone here has given this a go, I'd appreciate your feedback.
Also, if anyone here has used xubuntu, I'd appreciate feedback on that front
as well. I have a laptop from my company that I am going to setup Ubuntu on
and would like (at least) to use Fluxbox with, but my skills at configuring
Fluxbox are not very good, so having a release of Ubuntu that includes would
probably enlighten me quite a bit.
What do you want to know about Xubuntu?

I've played with it a little bit. I have tried it on both low-CPU and
low-RAM machines. It seems to offer little improvement over vanilla
GNOME Ubuntu except on really quite low-end kit. It was not noticeably
faster on my P3-750 320MB RAM Thinkpad, so I reverted to ordinary
Ubuntu (with "apt-get install ubuntu-desktop").

However, on a testbed machine, a PII-350 with 192MB RAM, Ubuntu took
around nine hours - 9h - to install and something like 10min to boot.
On it, Xubuntu was noticeably quicker and was fairly usable.

However, I find Xfce a lot less customisable than GNOME, where I can
quickly & easily drag & drop stuff around the place to get the desktop
just how I like. With Xfce, I was much more constrained.

It's not bad but I wouldn't personally use it in preference.

Also, it uses the same apps as Ubuntu - Firefox, OpenOffice and so on.
So aside from the desktop, it's not much lighter at all. For that
reason, I'm peripherally involved in Ubuntu Lite, which currently uses
IceWM, Kazehazake (sp?), AbiWord, Gnumeric, Sylpheed and other
lightweight apps as well. The idea is to target a box of Windows-98
level spec - Pentium 1, 128MB or less RAM and so on.

If anything, I'd say that Xubuntu suits a Windows 2000-level machine
rather than a Windows XP-level one. I.e., fast P2 or slow P3 (but at
least a 100MHz FSB), 128-256MB RAM. Win2K wants 256MB or more not to
be sluggish.

Ubuntu/Kubuntu & XP really want a fast PIII or better - gigahertz
class - and 512MB or more of RAM.

But all this is rather subjective. Some people are quite happy running
really slow machines, and some people get impatient on less than a
3GHz multi-core box with several gig of RAM.
--
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Scott Lockwood
2007-05-05 14:17:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by JD
I just found this version of Ubuntu last evening
(http://www.nubuntu.org/about.php)
Interesting. They remove the things I use the most, like OpenOffice and
Evolution, but if you want a fine collection of network doodads, it
looks perfect.

I use Xubuntu myself. Works great, out of the box.
--
Regards,
Scott Lockwood
Freddie Ruddick
2007-05-05 23:53:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by JD
If anyone here has given this a go, I'd appreciate your feedback.
I've used it, but only from the LiveCD, never installed it. Very useful,
with loads of password/passphrase sniffing/breaking, bluesnarfing, and
general networky type tools. However, most of these are of little to no
use for "normal" users. It may well (I don't know how much setup/config
is required) be easier to start with a standard ubuntu desktop install,
then install fluxbox with apt-get/Synaptic; than to install nubuntu and
track down and remove the un-needed networky stuff.

There's also fluxbuntu(.org), but that seems a little... deserted
Post by JD
Also, if anyone here has used xubuntu, I'd appreciate feedback on that front
as well.
It might be worth cross-posting that to xubuntu-users.

Freddie :)
--
"There was a point to this story, but it has temporarily escaped the
chronicler's mind." - This line perhaps best sums up the whole book.
cj
2007-05-06 00:36:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by JD
Also, if anyone here has used xubuntu, I'd appreciate feedback on that front
as well.
Xubuntu isnt bad. but i really dont care for xfce (the GUI in which xubuntu uses). Xubuntu is designed for older computers.

--cj
Eberhard Roloff
2007-05-06 12:03:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by cj
Post by JD
Also, if anyone here has used xubuntu, I'd appreciate feedback on that front
as well.
Xubuntu isnt bad. but i really dont care for xfce (the GUI in which xubuntu uses). Xubuntu is designed for older computers.
--cj
In fact it is great. Even on modern Computers imho the responsivenes of
XFCE versus the usual Gnome/KDE bloat is well worth a try.

I use it successfully on any older computer I have.

On my newer machines every now and then, I use XFCE for relaxation i.e.
for times when I do not want to work with a "desktop" monster, but just
need to use "applications" instead.

regards
Eberhard

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