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Things to Do after Installing Kubuntu 14.04

  • Make the Grub bootloader accessible.
    Otherwise, if you ever to need access to the bootloader, it will be too late.
    Install package kde-config-grub2 and you can configure it with the mouse under System Settings, Startup and Shutdown, GRUB2 Bootloader. Choose "Automatically boot..." after 1 second, so that you have 1 second to press the arrow down key (for example) and stop the boot process.
    Or manually: edit /etc/default/grub, add GRUB_TIMEOUT=1, comment out GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT, run sudo update-grub2.
    You may also want to remove kernel options quiet and splash in order to see the boot messages.
  • Get some disk performance back.
    Edit /etc/fstab and add options "noatime,commit=30" to your filesystems.
  • Disable unnecessary indexers:
    • KDE Baloo (formerly Nepomuk). Go to System Settings, Desktop Search, and add your home folder, which acts as an indication to turn the indexer off.
    • Akonadi. Go to System Settings, Personal Information, stop the service.
    • updatedb / locate database. See mlocate conflicting package.
  • Add pavucontrol (PulseAudio Volume Control) to your favourites.
    The standard volume control applet does not let you choose where an application like Skype should be recording the audio from.

For PCs with only 512 MiB RAM

512 MiB of RAM is too little nowadays for Ubuntu-based system. Starting the package manager is already a heavy load for such a computer. Here is some suggestions:

  • Get rid of apt-xapian-index, see Fake Replacement for Debian Package apt-xapian-index
  • Prevent unexpected system updates.
    Unexpected package manager activity in the background can render your PC unresponsive for a long time. Configure the system updates to check less often (weekly or every fortnight) and disable automatic installation.
  • Switch to a lightweight Web browser like Midori.
    You will lose some comfort, and some pages will not display properly, but Firefox and Chromium are just too heavy.
  • Optimise your swap:
    • Reduce the swappiness from the default 60 to 10.
      Add "vm.swappiness = 10" to file "/etc/sysctl.conf".
    • Move your swap partition to another drive.
      • If you have more than one drive, move the swap partition or file to the least-busy disk.
      • Try swapping to a USB stick.
      • If the computer has a memory card reader, you could use a fast memory card as the main swap drive.
      • If your video card has a lot of memory, some people have managed to use some of it as a swap device.
    • Try swapping to zram. It made things worse for me, but your mileage may vary.
  • Switch to a lightweight Linux distribution.
    Xubuntu or Lubuntu will not bring much. You could try Puppy Linux.