I did a little digging into this issue because performance on lower end
machines interests me personally. I plan on getting the numbers when I
can figure out how, for now I did my own testing. I actually prefer to
use a value of 'vm.swappiness=100' on lower memory machines. My
reasoning is that the system is going to go into swapping regardless on
say 384mb of ram (the lowest I get a usable desktop on the default
install). So getting less used memory already into swap can improve
performance for when it is needed for a more active application. As for
testing, the goal is to get Firefox up as fast as possible.

With vm.swappiness=10, the system boots and is able to log in, though
attempting to start Firefox brings the system to a halt as it swaps
pages back and forth. Attempting to multi-task only slows things down
more.

With vm.swappiness=100,  after login the system has some disk I/O while
idle at the desktop, but responsiveness is not hurt much. Starting
Firefox actually brings it up in around 10 seconds, and I am also able
to bring up the Gnome System Monitor to view process information as
well.

To reproduce these results for yourself (even on a powerful machine) you
can simulate out-of-memory pressure simply by passing a temporary
(reverts to default after reboot) boot parameter to the system. To test:

1. Hold shift while booting, wait until grub loads. Highlight the designated 
kernel to boot, and press E. Go down to the line that starts with "Linux" and 
press "END"
2. Append a space, followed by: mem=384m
3. (NOTE) This command will tell the kernel to ignore all but that amount of 
RAM. You can change the above value to anything you wish, such as mem=256m
4. Boot into the system and test your current swappiness by trying to load 
Firefox. The benchmark is only meaningful if the machine is under memory 
pressure, so lower the value of the boot parameter if the system does not seem 
sluggish.
5. Try another value (such as vm.swappiness=100), reboot and start again at 
step 1.

As I said, I plan on getting the numbers, and am currently working out a
way to do so. I should make my position clear I desire no change unless
performance gains are drastic. The default value of 60 is sufficient as
far as I see.

It seems to me that setting the value to vm.swappiness=100 has few
downsides on a system with quite sufficient ram as well. Using the
option on a machine with 3gb does not make it use swap at all.

-- 
bad default swappiness for desktop systems
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/516834
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