>> I've installed and updated Gentoo on my girlfriend's Acer Aspire One >> netbook and it's just so slow. The only things I can think of to >> speed it up would be to upgrade the RAM from 1GB (not sure if that's >> possible) and/or swap out the SSD for a HD. Anyone running a netbook >> not excruciatingly slow? >> >> - Grant >> > > I've got an Acer One for my father. I don't know the exact type; it is > the one with the 8GB SSD. > > I found it quiet usable, installed Gentoo with a minimal KDE3 on it. > Compiled with -Os, of course. RAM usage is below 256MB most of the time. > The only things I didn't get to work are 3D acceleration and the SSD > card slots but I haven't invested much time into it. > > The slowest part of the system is the SSD. It really slows things done > when they are loaded for the first time (for example the HTML part of > Konqueror takes 3s to load AFTER Konqueror itself came up). > > The rest of the system is pretty fast for my expectations.I compiled > most things in a chroot on my Celeron notebook (2 or 3 times the speed) > before moving it over but I really found compiling not _that_ slow. Its > usable for most regular updates and even kernels and such alike. For > larger packages, I mount an NFS share on /var/tmp/portage because I > don't want to wear down the SSD. > > Other tips: > Use ext2 FS. You don't want the journalling to cost you even more > performance and wear down the SSD. > > I wouldn't use laptop-mode. You don't want it to bog down the system > when it decides to flush its write cache. > > No syslog, it will only wear down the disk with many small write cycles. > > Use the noop IO scheduler (boot parameter elevator=noop). There is no > need for a scheduler on an SSD. > > ArchLinux also recommends deactivating DRI ('Option "DRI" "0"' in > xorg.conf) to free up 32MB of memory. > > Hope this helps.
Thanks guys, these are the kinds of tips I need. I really want this thing to work out so I can switch over to one. Lemme see if I've got this: 1. run xfce4 (already do) 2. compile with -Os (I was using -O2) 3. use ext2 (I was using ext3) 4. don't use laptop-mode (I didn't know it existed) 5. no syslog (does this mean don't even emerge a system logger like metalog?) 6. use elevator=noop at boot 7. deactivate DRI 8. upgrade RAM to the max Sound about right? - Grant