


sfs's and the like, 'cos I'm NOT a programmer, or coder. Moat & bigpup also seem quite pleased with it. MikeB tells me that it installed in Lucid, with just a little bit of tinkering. I use this in Tahrpup, Slacko 570, and ETP's obPrecise 14.07.26 'ChromeBook' Pup.
Download bitmeter 2 0.7.6 free#
The experimental version (0.8.0) is a wee bit 'buggy', apparently haven't yet tried it myself.feel free to do so if you're adventurous. There IS a 64-bit version, for those that require it.Īs it currently stands, the version you will probably want is the 'stable' one (currently 0.7.6). Many of us will want the Linux 32-bit version. Having said all THAT, I just wanted to share this with the community, in case anybody's interested. It uses approx 800k-1 MB, tops.so.it shouldn't pose any problems for those of you on lower-spec hardware. I, personally, am running this on a 10-yr old Compaq desktop Athlon 64 X2 dual-core CPU, 3 GB RAM, close to a terabyte of total storage.but this is definitely not a 'RAM hog'. Which makes them attractive to those of us using Puppy, where RAM usage is, for many, a real issue. It's not widely publicised I don't know why, because Rob has written most of the cross-platform utilities on his site with a view to making them as small & tidy as possible. On the 'CodeBox' website, belonging to an absolute genius of a guy by the name of Rob Dawson. And other network-related stuff.Īfter 2 or 3 days of Googling, I found it. That would allow the user to set an alarm, to warn you when you're approaching your monthly limit. That would summarise usage not only daily, but weekly, or monthly, or even yearly. That would show a graphical representation of data used, IN 'real-time'.
Download bitmeter 2 0.7.6 tv#
isos, watch a few videos, or stream live radio or TV for a few hours per day, and that SOON disappears like magic!Īccordingly, about a year ago, I started hunting around for an app that would monitor my broadband usage in 'real-time'.
Download bitmeter 2 0.7.6 download#
Sounds quite generous, doesn't it? Believe me, you've only got to download a few. Especially those of us using mobile broadband dongles, given that the ISPs tend to charge outrageous amounts for data purchased in this manner.Īt home, we have a data limit of 20 Gb/month on our service with British Telecom, here in the UK. Those of us in Puppy-Land probably less than most, since many of us are operating older, low-end equipment anyway.and some may be operating on a tight budget, or have a set 'cap' on our data-plans. Not everybody is lucky enough to have an unlimited data-plan. We ALL spend a lot of time in the browser nowadays, don't we? If you're anything like me, you can quickly find yourself gobbling up several GB's of data without really trying.
