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Making Tiger lighter for a G3
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Hi everyone 
I own an iBook G3 500MHz and have recently installed Tiger on it. It runs very slowly and I would like to know if there are ways to make the operating system less resources hungry.
Are there ways to turn off certain services/programs that run automatically that aren't necessary and cause a load on the system? Is it possible to make the system less of an "eye candy" to lower the load on the GPU/Memory/CPU?
In addition to that, I would like to know if there's a way to make Tiger occupy less disk space. I only have 10GB of disk space on this iBook, so every bit is important... There is a program called "Delocalizer" that erases the additional languages installed, but its support goes only up to Jaguar.
Any small relief to my tiny little iBook would be a great improvement...
Thanks a lot!

I own an iBook G3 500MHz and have recently installed Tiger on it. It runs very slowly and I would like to know if there are ways to make the operating system less resources hungry.
Are there ways to turn off certain services/programs that run automatically that aren't necessary and cause a load on the system? Is it possible to make the system less of an "eye candy" to lower the load on the GPU/Memory/CPU?
In addition to that, I would like to know if there's a way to make Tiger occupy less disk space. I only have 10GB of disk space on this iBook, so every bit is important... There is a program called "Delocalizer" that erases the additional languages installed, but its support goes only up to Jaguar.
Any small relief to my tiny little iBook would be a great improvement...
Thanks a lot!
Thanks for the great link! :p I'll try it today.
My iBook has 384MB of RAM, it's not a lot, but it's not bad either (I think...).
BTW, yesterday I found this cool app - it seems to turn off a few things that may increase performance/free up RAM.
Does anyone else have another idea/tip?
Thanks everyone
My iBook has 384MB of RAM, it's not a lot, but it's not bad either (I think...).
BTW, yesterday I found this cool app - it seems to turn off a few things that may increase performance/free up RAM.
Does anyone else have another idea/tip?
Thanks everyone
0
#5 May 16th, 2006
Hi guys
Yesterday I tried playing a DIVX video file through VLC Player on my little iBook... Don't ask... It barely kept a decent frame rate and after a few seconds it just stopped...
Is this machine totally incapable of playing videos? Is there anything that can be done to slim down the OS so that only crucial processes run? Maybe there's a way to remove components of the OS? It is possible in Windows XP, it must be possible in MacOS!
Yellow, I don't want to invest money in this machine, but do you honestly think that adding more ram would help the iBook play videos properly?
Thanks...
Yesterday I tried playing a DIVX video file through VLC Player on my little iBook... Don't ask... It barely kept a decent frame rate and after a few seconds it just stopped...
Is this machine totally incapable of playing videos? Is there anything that can be done to slim down the OS so that only crucial processes run? Maybe there's a way to remove components of the OS? It is possible in Windows XP, it must be possible in MacOS!

Yellow, I don't want to invest money in this machine, but do you honestly think that adding more ram would help the iBook play videos properly?
Thanks...
You can try lowering the resolution on the screen to 640x480 before opening the video file. The screen will be fuzzier, but the video file shouldn't be. Then just set the resolution back to 1024x768 after the video.
That trick may help out a bit.
That trick may help out a bit.
"Some of our competitors say that we're not offering people a choice. We're offering a choice, they just don't like the choice customers are making." - Steve Jobs
I wanted to try out that VLC program you mentioned, I found MPlayer OSX ran a little bit lighter than VLC on my machine (12" Powerbook 1.5GHz 10.4.6 512RAM)
"Some of our competitors say that we're not offering people a choice. We're offering a choice, they just don't like the choice customers are making." - Steve Jobs
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Originally Posted by Gantlett
Yellow, I don't want to invest money in this machine, but do you honestly think that adding more ram would help the iBook play videos properly?.
More RAM will make a big difference to repsone, uptime, and speed of opening applicaitons, but ultimately your speed issues are all in the slowness of the G3 processor and the massive overhead that Tiger requires.
And again.. no, you cannot strip down OS X. Unlike Windows XP, OS X doesn't have services turned on that you don't need. So there's nothing to strip down for speed.
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