When you're hard-pressed for RAM, you've got to choose your applications wisely. At the end of December, my colleague Seth Rosenblatt put together a thoughtful and in-depth Windows Starter Kit that collects the best-of-breed freeware applications for all categories. But what if your new Windows computer can be balanced on the palm of your hand and contains only a whiff of RAM? Take, for instance, the tiny Acer AspireOne laptop that my mother purchased on little more than a whim and a phenomenal deal. Not for kitchen lookups of way or recipes to win dinnertime debates, as I had imagined when we slipped the preemie out of its box first, but as a real way to look up Wikipedia articles, send late night e-mails, and perhaps play a Hulu or YouTube video before nodding off. With a piddly 512MB of RAM, my mother's new little gem can ill afford to suffer extras, especially when meeting specific, domestic demands. No, it's time to get ruthless. Despite its diminutive capacity, Little Gem came with plenty crapware on it, and more auto-installed after registration. I fired up the thorough Revo Uninstaller (to uninstall after all is said and done) and fed it an appetizer of Google Desktop and Google Toolbar. There will be few files to find.) Adobe Reader went out likewise, the free, lighter FoxIt Reader taking its place. Internet Explorer gets to stay for the right time being, only to facilitate Microsoft's automated updates. While the lighter Chrome would be the natural browser choice, Firefox won over for the time being, so that the folks can use the Foxmarks Bookmark Synchronizer extension to share bookmarks with the key computer. McAfee's Site Advisor security add-on for Firefox (and IE) is another perk, and the one which offers peace of mind also. Googlepedia is another useful, time-saving add-on that will bring my mom's Wikipedia articles to her if she commences a search within Google. I might consider installing CustomizeGoogle to blast away advertisings also. My mother is thus far unshakeable in her use of Outlook for e-mail, but if she can content herself to send messages by starlight and forgo reorganizing her in-box simply, we can rip out the entire Microsoft Office suite. Web applications such as Google Docs will work fine should the occasion arise, and if spreadsheet making and memoir writing go full-scale, Go-OO would serve her purpose likely. Keeping my mom's new Internet nugget light and lean takes top priority, but the applications she needs for a streamlined experience won't fit everyone's profile. Olympics turns to gold for Expat Shield. Which small, resource-saving applications do you use to keep from gobbling up all your RAM?
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