FeatherLinux, DSL, Puppy all work great on old rigs
On Sun, 2009-11-22 at 00:38 -0500, Josh Embrey wrote:
Although others have suggested other things, there are specific linux
distributions that can really work well with old (I mean REALLY old)
systems. The issue is that they're really
How many RAM and CPU does Lubuntu 10.4 will require?
i have a 266 mhz pentium 2 processor,126 mb ram and 5 gb disk space and
what linux kernel we would take?
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Hello!
In my opinion, Lubuntu 10.04 won't be 100% usable on such PC. Why? It's
lightweight for sure, the whole dev teams try to makes it as light as
possible. But the base is still built from Ubuntu, which is not that
lightweight. This means, the team got its limit.
It would be possible to
Eduard Gotwig wrote:
How many RAM and CPU does Lubuntu 10.4 will require?
i have a 266 mhz pentium 2 processor,126 mb ram and 5 gb disk space and
what linux kernel we would take?
Hello Eduard Gotwig,
This is much too under-powered for any distribution based on Ubuntu, as
Zsolt Peter Basak
Although others have suggested other things, there are specific linux
distributions that can really work well with old (I mean REALLY old)
systems. The issue is that they're really complicated for daily use. One
good one. TinyCore linux would work amazingly well on it, but it's not for
new
I would go with Deli Linux with those specs
Although others have suggested other things, there are specific linux
distributions that can really work well with old (I mean REALLY old)
systems. The issue is that they're really complicated for daily use. One
good one. TinyCore linux would
You can use Puppy Linux, DSL, TCL (as someone already mentioned), Deli
or whatever. But one can even build a
distro easily from Ubuntu packages. If there is a need, I can create a
demo VMware image or something.
One can use the DW search:
http://distrowatch.com/search.php
Select Old computers.
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