Inline here:
On Fri, Nov 6, 2020 at 6:28 PM Steve Litt via PLUG-discuss <
plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
> On Fri, 6 Nov 2020 07:48:40 -0700
> Michael Butash via PLUG-discuss <plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
>
> Chrome/Chromium and Firefox are absolute pigs. I finally tamed Firefox
> ty setting it to drop all cache and other stuff upon exit, and then I
> shut down all instances of Firefox every day.
>
They all are pigs I find. Tried Brave, Chrome, Chromium, and keep ending
up back at firefox as a lesser of evils. Chrome is the new IE, so now I
*need* it occasionally for plugins. I've been using tab suspenders across
each, doesn't help much.
My problem is I have to keep different profiles for different companies I
work with, usually no less than 4-6 at a time, 2 at least for my personal
gsuite and work. Mostly I do so for M$ O365/Teams, as they can't figure
out how to make it work across organizations or seemingly comprehend why
anyone would. Hint: Consultants that work for 5-10 orgs at a time. Each
profile just ends up hoarding ram, which ends up being 30-40gb at times on
my system.
I don't know how many VMs you run, but those eat up memory.
>
I have a mainstream Win10 build with visio and other windoze-y crap I need,
8gb of ram, and keep a few win10 ameliorated editions for clients to
minimize footprint with 4gb. Usually only 2 windoze, 1 if I can.
Occasionally a few other 2-4gb ram linux systems, but typically ~20gb for
vbox and my vms. It's where all the other memory goes I have a hard time
with, which I really can't identify.
What the heck kind of editor requires 3-4GB RAM? That sounds crazy to
> me. Why do you have a few dozen files open simultaneously?
>
Fine questions really, this tends to be where I'm bit odd. I've found
whether using Pluma, Gedit, or even qqnotepad, they all tend to get a bit
crazy with a lot of tabs. I presume things like undo memory, things like
that are adding up, but I'm still like geez, really?
Why so many? I mostly do network and security consulting, with config
files from existing devices, resulting operational output extracted in
text, across multiple orgs at a time. Not to mention configuration changes
I'm making for template deployment off those, so it gets a bit crazy
flipping between dozens of configs at a time.
If I could find better ways to manage some of this, it would be nice, but
seems everything just dumps this sort of thing into memory hoarding.
Libreoffice is kind of a pig. Is there something else you can use? And
> why a dozen or two simultaneous files open? This sounds like a workflow
> nightmare. Do you mean one Libreoffice instance with 24 files open, or
> a bunch of separate Libreoffices in VMs. If the latter, yeah, that's
> going to burn a lot of RAM, even more than one instance with 24
> documents.
>
I often blame Libreoffice, only to kill it with like 20 spreadsheets open,
and 30 write files and find it was using (only) around 4gb of ram. I take
notes a lot in libre because it's restore on crash has proven pretty
flawless vs., well anything else. I mostly prefer pluma for text input and
notes, but no good restore. Tried qqnotepad that had a restore function,
it was highly dysfunctional.
> Ohhhh, KDE. I call that Krash, Delay, Expand. See
> http://troubleshooters.com/lpm/201202/201202.htm . I use OpenBox, which
> is a low-RAM, just-the-facts window manager. On every machine I ever
> used KDE, performance was bad and on lower RAM machines, things ground
> to a halt.
>
> Gnome and KDE are luxuries for folks with lightning fast processors and
> huge quantities of RAM, who want their computers to perform like a 2015
> computer with 4GB RAM.
>
Yes KDE is a pain, but both pretty and functional. I like it, though it
friggin' hates me. Tried Mate/Cinnamon, i3, xfce, others randomly, just
never cared for most.
My work and life on a single pc blend probably too much, but when I still
can't seem to work functionally with 64-128gb of ram that simply no one
else uses but me, I'm like wtf is wrong with my setup.
> I'm running a 2014 computer:
> * AMD A6-6400K APU with Radeon(tm) HD Graphics (dual core)
> - 3.1Ghz dualcore
> * 16GB RAM
> * Openbox with dmenu and UMENU2
>
> With no browsers open, this machine is is snappy as hell. With firefox
> set to dump cache upon exit, as long as I do reasonable housekeeping on
> tabs, and prophylactically close all firefox instances at least once a
> day, everything's pretty good.
>
> That being said, this is a 2014 machine, so I'm soon buying a 3.6 Ghz 6
> core (65 watt) with 64GB RAM. This will give me more latitude in
> running Chromium, which I need for Jitsi, and allow me less stringent
> housekeeping in Firefox.
>
Perhaps this is just the price for working as I do. I also tend to keep
things open to work perpetually as who needs work/life balance, so purging
things would likely help.
Trying to work as I do under windoze as a test, it just couldn't hang.
Perhaps I expect too much of linux, but it's far more capable at least,
though when it gets wonky, it does so fast.
Thanks for the input here, I do appreciate it, as perhaps as said I am
simply going about things a wrong way, thus the ask.
>
> SteveT
>
> Steve Litt
> Autumn 2020 featured book: Thriving in Tough Times
> http://www.troubleshooters.com/thrive
> ---------------------------------------------------
> PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org
> To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
> https://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss
---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list -
PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
https://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss