Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email
?
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Home
About
Team
Rules
Stats
Status
Sitemap
Chat
Downloads
Forum
News
Our Projects
Major Community Projects
Recent Posts
Unread Posts
Replies
Tools
SourceCoder3
Other Things...
Omnimaga Radio
TI-83 Plus ASM File Unsquisher
Z80 Conversion Tools
IES TI File Editor
Free RAM areas
Comprehensive Getkeyr table
URL Shortener
Online Axe Tilemap Editor
Help
Contact Us
Change Request
Report Issue/Bug
Team
Articles
Members
View the memberlist
Search For Members
Buddies
Login
Register
Omnimaga
»
Forum
»
General Discussion
»
Technology and Development
»
Computer Usage and Setup Help
»
Making an old computer faster?
« previous
next »
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Author
Topic: Making an old computer faster? (Read 5883 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Spyro543
LV9
Veteran (Next: 1337)
Posts: 1189
Rating: +74/-3
Making an old computer faster?
«
on:
April 30, 2012, 02:28:48 pm »
I have a really, really old desktop computer (like it was made in 2000 or earlier
) and it's so slow there's lag on everything you do, even when using LXDE (it runs Ubuntu) (yes, even just moving the mouse is laggy). It has a 20 GB hard drive, half a gigabyte (or less) of RAM, and a really old Pentium processor. Don't even ask me about the graphics card. My question is, is there any way to make it run faster (at least fast enough to play Minecraft at normal render distance)? I know I can put more RAM in it, and putting in a new graphics card shouldn't be to difficult, but is there anything else I can do? (Any pointers would be helpful!)
Logged
ben_g
Hey cool I can set a custom title now :)
LV9
Veteran (Next: 1337)
Posts: 1002
Rating: +125/-4
Asm noob
Re: Making an old computer faster?
«
Reply #1 on:
April 30, 2012, 02:35:03 pm »
You could add some radium to make it faster.
Usually for games, the graphics card should be really good to have a reasonable speed. It's much more important than the CPU. But if the computer is made in 2000, then you should also check if you can replace the CPU with a faster one. A lot of things change in technology in 12 years.
At last: The RAM: I think 0.5GB is enough for minecraft, but a bit more won't hurt.
Logged
My projects
- The Lost Survivors (Unreal Engine)
ACTIVE
[GameCommandoSquad main project]
- Oxo, with single-calc multiplayer and AI (axe)
RELEASED
(
screenshot
) (
topic
)
- An android version of oxo (java)
ACTIVE
- A 3D collision detection library (axe)
RELEASED!
(
topic
)(
screenshot
)(
more recent screenshot
)(
screenshot of it being used in a tilemapper
)
Spoiler
For
inactive
:
- A first person shooter with a polygon-based 3d engine. (z80, will probably be recoded in axe using GLib)
ON HOLD
(
screenshot
)
- A java MORPG. (pc)
DEEP COMA
(
read more
)(
screenshot
)
- a minecraft game in axe
DEAD
(
source code available
)
- a 3D racing game (axe)
ON HOLD
(
outdated screenshot of asm version
)
This signature was last updated on 20/04/2015 and may be outdated
DJ Omnimaga
Clacualters are teh gr33t
CoT Emeritus
LV15
Omnimagician (Next: --)
Posts: 55943
Rating: +3154/-232
CodeWalrus founder & retired Omnimaga founder
Re: Making an old computer faster?
«
Reply #2 on:
April 30, 2012, 02:46:14 pm »
I lol'ed at the ticalc link. I remember that article
.
From experience, however, it seems for newer games it's often the video card that makes the difference for framerate. On my Pentium II 350 MHz, for example, i ran XP with only 256 MB of RAM and we could run some 650 MHz games pretty fine because they were not too demanding on video RAM and stuff. However, if your mobo is very old, then not many video cards will fit in it. Eg my Intel Celeron had no PCI-Express nor AGP slots, so I was stuck with PCI cards.
Of course, however, if the CPU is really old, then maybe it might need to be replaced too, along with a few more RAM.
Logged
Juju
Incredibly sexy mare
Coder Of Tomorrow
LV13
Extreme Addict (Next: 9001)
Posts: 5730
Rating: +500/-19
Weird programmer
Re: Making an old computer faster?
«
Reply #3 on:
April 30, 2012, 02:47:09 pm »
I would install the lightest window manager you can find, or even, no WM at all (only xterm) and stop pretty much all the useless background processes.
So yeah, bare-bones Linux where possible.
Logged
Remember the day the walrus started to fly...
I finally cleared
my sig
after 4 years you're happy now?
This signature is ridiculously large you've been warned.
The cute mare that used to be in my avatar is Yuki Kagayaki, you can follow her on
Facebook
and
Tumblr
.
DJ Omnimaga
Clacualters are teh gr33t
CoT Emeritus
LV15
Omnimagician (Next: --)
Posts: 55943
Rating: +3154/-232
CodeWalrus founder & retired Omnimaga founder
Re: Making an old computer faster?
«
Reply #4 on:
April 30, 2012, 02:49:29 pm »
Would Wine be fast enough on such old computer, though? (To run his Windows programs like Minecrack for example)
Logged
TIfanx1999
ಠ_ಠ ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
CoT Emeritus
LV13
Extreme Addict (Next: 9001)
Posts: 6173
Rating: +191/-9
Re: Making an old computer faster?
«
Reply #5 on:
April 30, 2012, 03:03:31 pm »
A fresh format couldn't hurt, make sure you have an os to reinstall first though. Make sure to turn all graphic or extra settings as low as possible. Running a low spec operating system helps too (don't know what you're using). As you said ram and graphic card updates are doable, but it might be hard to find compatible hardware depending on how old it is. You could also update the harddrive to the fastest read/write speed it supports, but i'm not sure if that would help with mine craft so much as it would performance overall.
Edit:Lol as a 2000 pc being described as "really old". My first pc(that was used) had a 5.5 in floppy disk drive and Ran Dos. No windows. No internet. No mouse. CGA display (4 colors)
It was probably ~20 years old and was the only pc we had in the house.
«
Last Edit: April 30, 2012, 03:08:47 pm by Art_of_camelot
»
Logged
Jim Bauwens
Lua! Nspire! Linux!
Editor
LV10
31337 u53r (Next: 2000)
Posts: 1881
Rating: +206/-7
Linux!
Re: Making an old computer faster?
«
Reply #6 on:
April 30, 2012, 03:32:15 pm »
I'd do what Juju said, it's good advice. Maybe an IceWM like window manager, just the basics.
Or, you could use a tiling wm, they are fun if you know how to use them
Logged
TI-Nspire projects of me:
nCreator
|
PCspire
|
Klondike Lua
|
LogoMagic
|
EEPro for the TI-Nspire
|
Pegs
|
General math definitions
|
Mini vMac
|
CHIP-8 emulator
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
« previous
next »
Omnimaga
»
Forum
»
General Discussion
»
Technology and Development
»
Computer Usage and Setup Help
»
Making an old computer faster?