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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
+<!--Converted with LaTeX2HTML 96.1-h (September 30, 1996) by Nikos Drakos (nikos@cbl.leeds.ac.uk), CBLU, University of Leeds -->
+<HTML>
+<HEAD>
+<TITLE>Space requirements</TITLE>
+<META NAME="description" CONTENT="Space requirements">
+<META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="sag">
+<META NAME="resource-type" CONTENT="document">
+<META NAME="distribution" CONTENT="global">
+<LINK REL=STYLESHEET HREF="sag.css">
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+<BODY LANG="EN" >
+ <A NAME="tex2html1006" HREF="node56.html"><IMG WIDTH=37 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="next" SRC="./next_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html1004" HREF="node53.html"><IMG WIDTH=26 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="up" SRC="./up_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html998" HREF="node54.html"><IMG WIDTH=63 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="previous" SRC="./previous_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html1008" HREF="node1.html"><IMG WIDTH=65 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="contents" SRC="./contents_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html1009" HREF="node114.html"><IMG WIDTH=43 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="index" SRC="./index_motif.gif"></A> <BR>
+<B> Next:</B> <A NAME="tex2html1007" HREF="node56.html">Examples of hard disk </A>
+<B>Up:</B> <A NAME="tex2html1005" HREF="node53.html">Allocating disk space</A>
+<B> Previous:</B> <A NAME="tex2html999" HREF="node54.html">Partitioning schemes</A>
+<BR> <P>
+<H2><A NAME="SECTION005102000000000000000">Space requirements</A></H2>
+<P>
+ The Linux distribution you install will give some indication
+ of how much disk space you need for various configurations.
+ Programs installed separately may also do the same. This will
+ help you plan your disk space usage, but you should prepare
+ for the future and reserve some extra space for things you will
+ notice later that you need.
+<P>
+ The amount you need for user files depends on what your users
+ wish to do. Most people seem to need as much space for their
+ files as possible, but the amount they will live happily with
+ varies a lot. Some people do only light text processing and
+ will survive nicely with a few megabytes, others do heavy
+ image processing and will need gigabytes.
+<P>
+ By the way, when comparing file sizes given in kilobytes or
+ megabytes and
+ disk space given in megabytes, it can be important to know that
+ the two units can be different. Some disk manufacturers like
+ to pretend that a kilobyte is 1000 bytes and a megabyte is
+ 1000 kilobytes, while all the rest of the computing world
+ uses 1024 for both factors. Therefore, my 345&nbsp;MB hard disk
+ is really a 330&nbsp;MB hard disk.<A NAME="tex2html25" HREF="footnode.html#1409"><IMG ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="gif" SRC="./foot_motif.gif"></A>
+<P>
+ Swap space allocation is discusses in section&nbsp;<A HREF="node64.html#secswapalloc">5.5</A>.
+<P>
+<BR> <HR>
+<P><ADDRESS>
+<I>Lars Wirzenius <BR>
+Sat Nov 15 02:32:11 EET 1997</I>
+</ADDRESS>
+</BODY>
+</HTML>