I have an old Mitsubishi Amity, which is smaller than a laptop, but not as small as a palm top. It's old and built to run Windows 95, but I know people have gotten Debian to do well on this computer. It has 48 MB of memory and a 1.4 GB hard drive, which means it does not have many resources and, by today's standards -- well, let's not even talk about speed.
I will be using this because I can put it in my backpack with my books and papers and easily take it along without a case, a laptop cooler, and a lot of other toys (just the power supply). My main goal is to be able to write on it, save, and import into OpenOffice later. (OO requires too much RAM to work on this). I may, later, end up using it to do some troubleshooting by hooking it up to my clients' LANs, but most of what I need for that is ssh, ping, traceroute, and similar utilities that are all command line based. While I use vi quite often and have used emacs, I prefer a GUI based word processor when I'm in "writing mode." It just matches the way I think when I'm writing instead of programming. Can anyone recommend or tell me about what window managers they use on low resource systems with good results and what word processors they use in that situation? I know AbiWord only requires 16 MB, and that makes it a good candidate. I thought about GEdit, but a little more formatting would be nice, since I am often writing film scripts, and margins are needed for those. That doesn't make it unusable, but just makes it less desirable than AbiWord (which I have heard can be programmed with macros to do easy margin changes quickly). Any other comments on programs, desktops, windows mangers, and such that people are using on older/smaller systems would be appreciated. I'm planning on sticking with Sarge, so I don't want to use programs in Sid. Etch is a possibility, but I'd rather wait and stick with Stable. Thanks! Hal -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]