Very slow ubuntu Desktop












0















I have use 2GB With Dual Core Processor Computer, and install ubuntu 12.04, Even though the computer is running very slow, All time Show CPU Uses 100 %, and Memory Uses 100%.



So What should i do to speed up my computer.










share|improve this question





























    0















    I have use 2GB With Dual Core Processor Computer, and install ubuntu 12.04, Even though the computer is running very slow, All time Show CPU Uses 100 %, and Memory Uses 100%.



    So What should i do to speed up my computer.










    share|improve this question



























      0












      0








      0








      I have use 2GB With Dual Core Processor Computer, and install ubuntu 12.04, Even though the computer is running very slow, All time Show CPU Uses 100 %, and Memory Uses 100%.



      So What should i do to speed up my computer.










      share|improve this question
















      I have use 2GB With Dual Core Processor Computer, and install ubuntu 12.04, Even though the computer is running very slow, All time Show CPU Uses 100 %, and Memory Uses 100%.



      So What should i do to speed up my computer.







      12.04 ram memory-usage






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Mar 11 '16 at 12:08









      wittich

      795716




      795716










      asked Mar 11 '16 at 10:08









      Chirag DarjiChirag Darji

      14




      14






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          First, look at gnome-system-monitor for realizing what's going on. But I think You must install Lubuntu(LXDE based Ubuntu). You can get much higher performance with it on 2GB RAM with a dual core processor.



          The difference is just the look. You can run everything that works under default Ubuntu






          share|improve this answer


























          • It Mean to say ,** gnome-system-monitor** CPU process is very high, and i do not use ** Lubuntu** only use Ubuntu.

            – Chirag Darji
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:24











          • if you have the answer so please give me, otherwise no problem,

            – Chirag Darji
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:25






          • 1





            Its a Graphical System Monitor Open it and check which service or process taking high usage.

            – Ramesh Chand
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:41











          • Run it via typing gnome-system-monitor and switch to Process tab. And See which process is exploitting CPU (click %CPU collumn). Otherwise, you can see it via top command.

            – Orhan G. Hafif
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:46











          • And I've used Lubuntu when I was using old laptop like yours, 2GB Ram, Dual Core. I definetly recommend Lubuntu. I just warn you but of course it's your decision.

            – Orhan G. Hafif
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:51



















          1














          You can give try to use nmon (Monitor Linux Performance) tools will help you more to reduce the system performance,



          More help Full tools:



          lsof - List Open Files



          Htop – Linux Process Monitoring



          You can try Ubuntu Alternative Kubuntu which is based on KDE desktop, I used it and Kubuntu so much faster than Ubuntu:



          Kubuntu page:






          share|improve this answer























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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            2














            First, look at gnome-system-monitor for realizing what's going on. But I think You must install Lubuntu(LXDE based Ubuntu). You can get much higher performance with it on 2GB RAM with a dual core processor.



            The difference is just the look. You can run everything that works under default Ubuntu






            share|improve this answer


























            • It Mean to say ,** gnome-system-monitor** CPU process is very high, and i do not use ** Lubuntu** only use Ubuntu.

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:24











            • if you have the answer so please give me, otherwise no problem,

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:25






            • 1





              Its a Graphical System Monitor Open it and check which service or process taking high usage.

              – Ramesh Chand
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:41











            • Run it via typing gnome-system-monitor and switch to Process tab. And See which process is exploitting CPU (click %CPU collumn). Otherwise, you can see it via top command.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:46











            • And I've used Lubuntu when I was using old laptop like yours, 2GB Ram, Dual Core. I definetly recommend Lubuntu. I just warn you but of course it's your decision.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:51
















            2














            First, look at gnome-system-monitor for realizing what's going on. But I think You must install Lubuntu(LXDE based Ubuntu). You can get much higher performance with it on 2GB RAM with a dual core processor.



            The difference is just the look. You can run everything that works under default Ubuntu






            share|improve this answer


























            • It Mean to say ,** gnome-system-monitor** CPU process is very high, and i do not use ** Lubuntu** only use Ubuntu.

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:24











            • if you have the answer so please give me, otherwise no problem,

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:25






            • 1





              Its a Graphical System Monitor Open it and check which service or process taking high usage.

              – Ramesh Chand
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:41











            • Run it via typing gnome-system-monitor and switch to Process tab. And See which process is exploitting CPU (click %CPU collumn). Otherwise, you can see it via top command.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:46











            • And I've used Lubuntu when I was using old laptop like yours, 2GB Ram, Dual Core. I definetly recommend Lubuntu. I just warn you but of course it's your decision.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:51














            2












            2








            2







            First, look at gnome-system-monitor for realizing what's going on. But I think You must install Lubuntu(LXDE based Ubuntu). You can get much higher performance with it on 2GB RAM with a dual core processor.



            The difference is just the look. You can run everything that works under default Ubuntu






            share|improve this answer















            First, look at gnome-system-monitor for realizing what's going on. But I think You must install Lubuntu(LXDE based Ubuntu). You can get much higher performance with it on 2GB RAM with a dual core processor.



            The difference is just the look. You can run everything that works under default Ubuntu







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Jan 22 at 14:02

























            answered Mar 11 '16 at 11:13









            Orhan G. HafifOrhan G. Hafif

            4010




            4010













            • It Mean to say ,** gnome-system-monitor** CPU process is very high, and i do not use ** Lubuntu** only use Ubuntu.

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:24











            • if you have the answer so please give me, otherwise no problem,

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:25






            • 1





              Its a Graphical System Monitor Open it and check which service or process taking high usage.

              – Ramesh Chand
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:41











            • Run it via typing gnome-system-monitor and switch to Process tab. And See which process is exploitting CPU (click %CPU collumn). Otherwise, you can see it via top command.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:46











            • And I've used Lubuntu when I was using old laptop like yours, 2GB Ram, Dual Core. I definetly recommend Lubuntu. I just warn you but of course it's your decision.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:51



















            • It Mean to say ,** gnome-system-monitor** CPU process is very high, and i do not use ** Lubuntu** only use Ubuntu.

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:24











            • if you have the answer so please give me, otherwise no problem,

              – Chirag Darji
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:25






            • 1





              Its a Graphical System Monitor Open it and check which service or process taking high usage.

              – Ramesh Chand
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:41











            • Run it via typing gnome-system-monitor and switch to Process tab. And See which process is exploitting CPU (click %CPU collumn). Otherwise, you can see it via top command.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:46











            • And I've used Lubuntu when I was using old laptop like yours, 2GB Ram, Dual Core. I definetly recommend Lubuntu. I just warn you but of course it's your decision.

              – Orhan G. Hafif
              Mar 11 '16 at 12:51

















            It Mean to say ,** gnome-system-monitor** CPU process is very high, and i do not use ** Lubuntu** only use Ubuntu.

            – Chirag Darji
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:24





            It Mean to say ,** gnome-system-monitor** CPU process is very high, and i do not use ** Lubuntu** only use Ubuntu.

            – Chirag Darji
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:24













            if you have the answer so please give me, otherwise no problem,

            – Chirag Darji
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:25





            if you have the answer so please give me, otherwise no problem,

            – Chirag Darji
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:25




            1




            1





            Its a Graphical System Monitor Open it and check which service or process taking high usage.

            – Ramesh Chand
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:41





            Its a Graphical System Monitor Open it and check which service or process taking high usage.

            – Ramesh Chand
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:41













            Run it via typing gnome-system-monitor and switch to Process tab. And See which process is exploitting CPU (click %CPU collumn). Otherwise, you can see it via top command.

            – Orhan G. Hafif
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:46





            Run it via typing gnome-system-monitor and switch to Process tab. And See which process is exploitting CPU (click %CPU collumn). Otherwise, you can see it via top command.

            – Orhan G. Hafif
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:46













            And I've used Lubuntu when I was using old laptop like yours, 2GB Ram, Dual Core. I definetly recommend Lubuntu. I just warn you but of course it's your decision.

            – Orhan G. Hafif
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:51





            And I've used Lubuntu when I was using old laptop like yours, 2GB Ram, Dual Core. I definetly recommend Lubuntu. I just warn you but of course it's your decision.

            – Orhan G. Hafif
            Mar 11 '16 at 12:51













            1














            You can give try to use nmon (Monitor Linux Performance) tools will help you more to reduce the system performance,



            More help Full tools:



            lsof - List Open Files



            Htop – Linux Process Monitoring



            You can try Ubuntu Alternative Kubuntu which is based on KDE desktop, I used it and Kubuntu so much faster than Ubuntu:



            Kubuntu page:






            share|improve this answer




























              1














              You can give try to use nmon (Monitor Linux Performance) tools will help you more to reduce the system performance,



              More help Full tools:



              lsof - List Open Files



              Htop – Linux Process Monitoring



              You can try Ubuntu Alternative Kubuntu which is based on KDE desktop, I used it and Kubuntu so much faster than Ubuntu:



              Kubuntu page:






              share|improve this answer


























                1












                1








                1







                You can give try to use nmon (Monitor Linux Performance) tools will help you more to reduce the system performance,



                More help Full tools:



                lsof - List Open Files



                Htop – Linux Process Monitoring



                You can try Ubuntu Alternative Kubuntu which is based on KDE desktop, I used it and Kubuntu so much faster than Ubuntu:



                Kubuntu page:






                share|improve this answer













                You can give try to use nmon (Monitor Linux Performance) tools will help you more to reduce the system performance,



                More help Full tools:



                lsof - List Open Files



                Htop – Linux Process Monitoring



                You can try Ubuntu Alternative Kubuntu which is based on KDE desktop, I used it and Kubuntu so much faster than Ubuntu:



                Kubuntu page:







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Mar 11 '16 at 12:35









                Ramesh ChandRamesh Chand

                3,51641930




                3,51641930






























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