Ubuntu is slow!
By Angsuman Chakraborty, Gaea News NetworkThursday, July 7, 2005
I hate to say this but after installing Ubuntu on a 1.8 GHz PC with 256 MB RAM, I found it to be slower than Windows 2000. Here is my experience.
The boot-up sequence takes almost 1.5-2 times longer than Windows 2000. In case of power failure, which is not uncommon here, Windows recovers much better (after manadatory chkdsk) than Ubuntu. It simply forced me to re-install both times. That is clearly not acceptable.
It did recognize the system well and installed itself correctly. But it appeared to lack in performance, at least in the UI.
I couldn’t play mp3 files or mpeg movies. Due to some copyright restrictions such players are not installed by default.
The ability to recognize Windows systems and drives in the network is a big plus.
I had great hopes for Ubuntu but so far I think, either I am missing something big which I doubt or else Ubuntu needs some fine-tuning.
Note: I am not using the latest release but the one before that. I always confuse the names like Warty Whatever or Hoary Whatever and which of them is the later version, so don’t ask me the name.
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August 20, 2010: 4:28 am
my ubuntu 10.04 starts to work very slowly after i have loaded web cam server.i will appreciate to the people who can inform me about the possible reson. and my web cam started to be blank.thank you |
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vismay |
June 24, 2010: 4:37 am
my ubuntu 10.04 is running very slow. it is taking more than five seconds to open certain files. my ranm is 1 gb. |
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qwerty |
February 3, 2010: 8:04 am
i got a dual core 2.8 ghz, 2 gb ram and intel graphic chip |
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jura |
February 24, 2009: 1:27 am
You can also try installing console-only ubuntu on very old machines and then install things you need like desktop environment and window managers. |
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Dee |
February 22, 2009: 10:18 am
If Ubuntu is too slow for you, maybe you can try other “lightweight” distro, but they might not be as user friendly as Ubuntu. Try Gentoo, Slackware or Zenwalk. I’m not saying Ubuntu is bad or anything, each Linux distro has it’s own way of getting into it’s goal. Ubuntu has a very large kernel image for including many things build inside it (not as kernel module), and that maybe the cause of slowdown on some machine (older ones). As for saying “Ubuntu rocks fast on my 3 Ghz P4 with 1GB of mem”, I can say any Linux can run fast in that machine. Have you ever installed Ubuntu in AMD Duron 1 GHz with 256 MB of ram? It’s took almost 2 hours to install and the system is slow. To the crator of this post, you can always try another distro if Ubuntu is not suitable for your machine. That’s the real beauty of Linux. |
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nubuntu for me |
February 5, 2009: 11:04 pm
Hi folks: I am looking at Xubuntu on a pre-war Thinkpad, admittedly an old machine. In the past, I have used Slackware with either xfce or twm, very basic installation, since KDE is hopelessly slow on this thing. I had hoped Xubuntu might be OK, more modern, etc., but I am finding that it takes about 15 minutes to boot, and, even after that is quite finished, it still takes 15-20 seconds to open, for example, an xterm. I am finding my way around the configuration options but there does not seem to be much I can do about it. My advice: go with Slackware and tweak it barebones for speed, seems to blow Xubuntu out of the water on older hardware. And no, XP would never run on this thing either. |
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August 30, 2008: 8:12 am
This post is total crap. From the sound of it, the poster has tried to install a version of ubuntu from 2004. Let me spell that out: Two Thousand and Four. Maybe you should have at LEAST tried to RTFM before you began? Yes, there are restricted drivers. If you had RTFM, again, you would have known that 2 mouse clicks away installs all needed drivers, software, etc. LITERALLY, TWO MOUSE CLICKS.
Oh, I don’t doubt you are missing half your brain at all. Which, despite your lack of clarity on the matter, is SOMETHING BIG. Knowledge is power, to lack it spells defeat. It’s not Ubuntu’s fault, you did not RTFM. Also, even if you were unable to find/Read TFM, on the desktop, 1 click away, is complete support on IRC, from THOUSANDS, literally THOUSANDS of individuals willing to hold your hand and walk you through a few tasks which may be just a TAD more advanced than clicking the “Next” button. So, you let your Ego take control and post this article bashing one of the VERY best operating systems ever made/in existence, due to the fact that you were mis-informed, however thought you did in fact know everything. (Sociopathic) Before you create a post with a very negative title, de-faming due to your lack of intelegence, next time, DON’T try it, or RTFM, or realize you are not some god of computers becuase you know how to install windows, and you may be severely lacking large pieces of information by your own misguided actions. /End Rant. In Short: |
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August 14, 2008: 6:50 am
Hello, If Ubuntu appears to be slow, it might just be that Gnome is too heavy for such a configuration. A solution to consider could be to install Xubuntu instead wich shoud be lighter… |
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August 14, 2008: 6:46 am
Bonjour, Si Ubuntu ne tourne pas très bien, c’est peut-être simplement que Gnome est un peu lourd pour la plateforme. |
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JUNIOR |
August 4, 2008: 3:54 pm
are you all cracked out?? looks to me like the ubuntu haters dont have a clue about much of anything. I am runnin ubuntu 8.04 on a P4 3ghz 1 gig ram and it blows away any version of windows and vista well vista is a flamining POS on all points. |
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June 19, 2008: 11:57 am
From what I’ve seen Ubuntu is a pretty well put together piece of software, it does have a few bugs. (but what doesn’t?) In my experience the start up is rather fast (about 40s after I push the ‘power’ button it’s ready to go) btw go for the latest version of Ubuntu because it would obviously have some bugs worked out. |
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skeelee |
May 22, 2008: 1:33 am
Ganesh, I don’t think “Ubuntu Sucks!” is a fair statement to make. Having said that, I too am not happy with Ubuntu so far. I installed Ubuntu on two P4 machines, one with 512Mb RAM and the other 256Mb. The 512Mb machine is doing OK, but the 256Mb machine is facing all sorts of problems. It was running Windows XP alright before that, mind you. To start, I can’t install Ubuntu from the Live CD, had to use the alternative CD. Everything runs simply too slow for it to be usable. What breaks the straw for me is that I can’t use my Epson EPL-6100L printer, not even with the printer driver available on some sites. So, after several months of trying out Ubuntu, I decided that it is not (yet) for me. |
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Ganesh |
May 11, 2008: 9:51 pm
I was happily running windows 2000 on P4 2.0ghz and 256MB Ram. 3 weeks back thought about trying the Ubuntu 8.04(Gnome) and now googling with various keywords for why ubuntu is slow. I have 2 options either to buy new hardware just to run ubuntu or reinstall win2k. I am going with windows. Last 3 weeks, I was spending all my time in googling and setting up the ubuntu instead of doing my actual work. I couldn´t open more than 2-3 windows otherwise I need to reboot the system as it is keep hanging. UBUNTU SUCKS! IMO. (have read 100s of articles on why linux is better than windows :-)) |
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velius |
March 18, 2008: 5:13 pm
Dude ubuntu sucks reason is because the kernel includes like everything. Re-compile kernel, and mess with init scripts and i bet it will speed up. I would suggest going with a distro like gentoo or if your not that good with linux yet i would suggest debian over ubuntu. Plus you wont deal with as many noob know it alls with those distros vs ubuntu (this is personal opinion). Good luck cheers |
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ah |
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ubuntusucks |
August 4, 2007: 10:26 pm
Kubuntu is too slow on 1 gig RAM core 2 duo lappie. Compared with Vista that flies. Mouse irresponsible. I do not complain about boot time but most apps are slow. Process catcher pops up saying that almost all apps are slowing down my system, shut them? These statements that Linux is superior to windows in 1) speed, 2) sys resources, 3) functionality are so obviously wrong. Hey why it takes more than 192 MB to run live cd? What the programs like katapult can do except showing they version number, it outrageously funny. Conclusion linux never will be popular or usable OS. just a toy with hidden bugs, like a game (strategy game in text mode) manage to install it and find another 100 bugs. |
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pacsum |
August 3, 2007: 11:55 am
Ubuntu (much faster than Vista) is supposed to be compared in performance with Vista not with XP or win 2000. You should have tried Xubuntu in your case. |
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Trevor07 |
March 16, 2007: 9:30 am
I’m running xubuntu 6.10 with xfce as my wm, and it is slow. Everything seems slow, like rowing a canoe through a molasses river in the dead of winter. Booting takes a long time, applications take a long time to load (Firefox, a simple x text editor, even a terminal, all slow)…my system is a Celeron 900 MHz, with 512 MB of ram…which should be more than adequate for xubuntu….but apparently it’s not. i’m disappointed overall. It still looks crummy and patchy and disjointed…the fonts, the windows themselves….everything is still unpolished and patchy-looking. |
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Evert11 |
March 8, 2007: 2:15 pm
I used Ubuntu for several years and it seems to me that the new releases are a lot slower booting and opening programs. |
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March 4, 2007: 8:16 am
I’m having the java problem too. I was a bit annoyed/shocked to see how slow even xubuntu runs (6.10) on my amd 1.2 laptop, xp runs faster once properly tweaked (eg services stopped, ballon tips disabled etc etc). CPU often stays at 100% although, oddly, the system is still responsive and will even clearly play video files when at was at 100% before I even started to play then. |
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Aznil |
October 9, 2006: 8:46 am
I’ve been using Xubuntu for 2 weeks now and really loving it. I do have problems playing my ‘mp3′. I got the problem solved by using Automatic (www.getautomatix.com). Its a scripting tool that automate common task for Debian Based Distro. The only thing abt xubuntu, is that you need to be on the internet often to have it running well. And that is really troublesome for people with slower connection. So, im sticking with Xubuntu, even though it is much harder to get my java 6 to run proper here… on to google :). |
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Sriram Murali |
August 2, 2006: 7:48 pm
Yes Xubuntu is the key. You can also get the Xfce desktop from your gnome system without reinstalling Xubuntu try getting it from atp-repositories sudo apt-get install xfce-desktop |
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June 11, 2006: 7:07 am
It is encouraging to hear about your experience with Xubuntu. My experience was with Ubuntu, not Xubuntu. I will give XUbuntu a try. |
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billy |
June 11, 2006: 6:43 am
I just wanted to report that as a prior windows 2000 user myself.. now Xubuntu fanatic in less than 3 days.. i thought i would chime in and say that i don’t see a reason to ever go back to windows.. what good is the speed when i spent half my time fighting windows rot and patching.. xubuntu has life time support now and the upgrades and updates that improve the performance and add cool new features are almost once a week now.. the nice thing about xubuntu updates is i don’t have to reboot my machine like i did with windows.. i’ve tweaked my system since the basic setup comes made for use as a workstation more than as a desktop and a quick search can show you the same performance tweaks that really boost the overall speed.. i just got windows streaming video running fine and mp3 files as well.. it wasn’t hard at all and i found all my answers in a quick google search.. when you get tired of the windows rot and updating and constant adware give xubuntu a try.. don’t rush to judge.. spend some time and give it a chance.. change is good.. |
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March 18, 2006: 3:36 pm
I hate to say this but after installing Ubuntu on a 1.8 GHz PC with 256 MB RAM, I found it to be slower than Windows 2000. In case of power failure, which is not uncommon here, Windows recovers much better (after manadatory chkdsk) than Ubuntu. It simply forced me to re-install both times. That is clearly not acceptable. It did recognize the system well and installed itself correctly. But it appeared to lack in performance, at least in the UI. I couldn’t play mp3 files or mpeg movies. Due to some copyright restrictions such players are not installed by default. All in all, you should just try the latest version (5.10, Breezy Badger) or even better: wait till April and then try out Dapper Drake (6.04). That version is really gonna rock. |
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virtualx |
March 5, 2006: 2:02 pm
Ubuntu still blows when it comes to speed - a better debian baised distro is MEPIS - it comes with audio and video fully enables and boots much quicker. It’s slightly more complex - but I find ubuntus overly simplified gnome interface actually makes it harder to find the things i want and tweak my system. |
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January 23, 2006: 6:48 am
Thank you Bilbo. Only famous person I know of sharing my name with is Anshuman Gaekwad, an ex-cricketer. > low life machine > you missed another thing: w2k, with all the stability needs to be rebooted once a week/day month. That was very much true in the past version of windows, even Windows NT. However I have to admit I have much better experience with Windows 2000. I have it up weeks at a time without any problem whatsoever. What bothers is is that with every power-cut it forced me to re-install the OS, no less. It was cumbersome on an empty system. But if it had even half of the applications I have on this machine… Thanks for the information on the releases. > order a CD it is free |
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Bilbo Bagginz |
January 23, 2006: 3:10 am
Hi, first of all, you have a nice name … I think there’s a famous Indian actor with this name now, the critics. 2. you missed another thing: w2k, with all the stability needs to be rebooted once a week/day month. Ubuntu - doesn’t. 3. the names/releases are actually funny: 1st digit is year of the release, and second number is the month. 4. Ubuntu doesn’t need to be fine tuned, but it needs to be at least up-to-date. order a CD it is free, man |
tan