I am getting an old laptop running. On my newer or desktop systems I use ubuntu or kubuntu. But for this machine (750MHz PIII, 512 M ram, 1280x1024 display with ATI rage graphics) the ubuntu derivatives fell big, heavy and slow. Would you please point me to some in depth review of distros running on this class of hardware? Edit: Here is an undated list of lightweight Linux distributions. Does anybody have recent in depth reviews of any of these? |
I have experimented with several distros. One of my favourites, for Old Machines is Vector Linux 5.9 (or 6) (light). Another, which works, although simpler, but fails (reboots) once in a while, is Puppy Linux. Another nice version is Zeven OS (a lighter XFce derivative of Ubuntu). Be conservative setting up the video, as I have seen some of the old video cards burned out... Best regards, gvkoeller www.centralcostarica.net |
You could settle for the core packages of Arch Linux. If you need a graphical interface, skip the desktop environment and install a window manager like openbox or fluxbox. Even your old hardware shouldn't have any problems with this configuration. What are your specific needs? Are you working on a solution for five machines or hundreds? In my experience, an Arch installation has to be customized to a specific machine to a certain degree. Thus, if deployability is important to you, Arch might not be the best choice. A lot of reviews regarding Arch can be found here: Arch Linux Press Coverage |
I have found a 2009 aug 26 review of Ubuntu Lite. And a 2009 nov 8 comparative review. Are there any more in depth reviews of lightweight distros? |
That's more than likely because of the choice of desktop. If you're using KDE or Gnome, that's a heavy weight of processing to put on top of an older machine. Instead of the heavy desktops, you could choose to use one of the lightweight desktops (XFCE) or eschew a desktop completely and go for a very lightweight window manager (fluxbox, blackbox, windowmaker or even fvwm2). You can still use the applications that belong to the big desktops, but you don't have the overheads associated with them. Most distros let you choose your desktop. When you boot up, at the point where you login with your password, somewhere on that screen there is usually a button or menu option to choose your desktop. Try XFCE and see if that is snappier with your hardware. I would recommend XFCE. But if that is still too slow, try the window managers like fluxbox or windowmaker, but then you have more configuration to do yourself. If you want to dig deeper, go to http://distrowatch.com and look down the right column at the ranked list of distros, and click on each distro and see which desktops they come with. |
http://www.reviewlinux.com/ to column called "Linux Reviews" read #1, #11, #14, #15, #20 --stinkythink