this post was submitted on 17 Apr 2024
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"64-128mb ram" is hardly "low memory"!
For video it is. Unless you want your desktop to be in 128p
It's probably plenty for vnc or spice though. I had a 486 with 8mb of video RAM that could do 1024x748 display resolutions...
~~no you can't. That would require 1.6mb of ram for a single frame. In reality you need lots and lots of frames with hardware decoding plus network overhead.~~
Not to mention that CPU would be way to slow to run anything but the bare Linux kernel (also the kernel requires 8mb)
Edit: I misread. I thought you were talking about computer memory not video memory. That makes more sense. Although your 30 year old CPU isn't going to be running VNC or Spice any time soon. (Your welcome to prove me wrong)
I am pretty sure my p200mmx with 64mb ram could run a vnc client while listening to a blink182 mp3 in XMMS using the enlightenment window manager
Do it. I want to see it happen but I am doubtful
Of course not - it couldn't even play MP3s without stuttering. I was just addressing the question of memory constraints.
I mean... I did. 🤷♂️
https://www.google.com/search?q=%281024++768++32%29+bits+in+mb
Using 32 bits to be conservative that's a bit over 3MB.
Granted I couldn't play most games at that resolution on a 486 but it worked for a desktop resolution.
You kids with your GPUs with gigabytes of memory and your blue jeans...
Different time I suppose. I ran Linux on a old machine with a Pentium and 32mb of ram with systemd about 2 years ago. Sadly it died and now it won't turn on.
1024x768x24bit is 2.4 MB
Wait, actually wouldn't it be 1.6 mb? Your connection probably doesn't use full 24bit color. (Its not HDR)
Anyway my point still stands.
Dang, did you just maff on him bro?
Anti Commercial-AI license
Megabytes, a thousand of which make a gigabyte. Chrome in my machine right now is taking over one gigabyte of memory, that alone is using more than 8 times what OP wants the whole system to. It's definitely an ask for low memory, almost embedded levels of ram.
I wouldn't be against something that needs 1gb or 4gb. Of course it's different hardware class, but if it actually does a better job, it would be fine.
Although I suspect for a thin client, 512mb would be more than enough and adding more wouldn't improve much of anything.
Chrome is actually doing a lot of work to display modern webpages though. A thin client only needs to receive a video stream and send inputs to a server. That can be done with an extremely low memory footprint. The Steam Link only had 512MB of RAM and it actually ran a steam client (which contains embedded chromium) instead of acting as a pure thin client.