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10 comments

Comment from: Jan [Visitor]
I too have an ancient (well, 2000-ish) laptop with 128 MB ram and Pentium 3 600 MHz. I first opted for Debian with fluxbox, but after being disgusted with it's configuration system and lack of configurability (no, I don't want Apache/mail server running automatically just because some package has an optional dependency on it), I decided to have a 32-bit chroot on my main box and just made a gentoo install on it, with -Os of course. This works fine, with a minimal KDE install. Just begins to swap alot with a Konqueror window with ~15 tabs and Kile open, but that is to be expected. Firefox is just too bloated for this machine.
05/25/08 @ 16:10
Comment from: Thumos [Visitor] Email · http://vosse.blogspot.com
Nice overview. You may want to evaluate MEPIS AntiX, SLAX and its spin offs (Wolvix, NimbleX)as well.

I stayed small and wound up using SliTaz, Puppy 4, Wolvix and a personalized Debian net install on my 0$ 400mhz 256meg ram desktop. Puppy is the best solution for me right now but SliTaz is catching up fast.
05/25/08 @ 22:03
Just found this quick review of small distros via OSNews. Might be worth a look too.

http://www.abzone.be/Review001_p001
05/26/08 @ 12:04
Comment from: Josh Saddler [Member] Email · http://dev.gentoo.org/~nightmorph
@Thumos:

Thanks for the tips; I may give those a try. Long as they offer something besides Xfce, that is. Xfce used to be installed, but even that's too much these days.

SliTaz does indeed look really good. Performance-wise, it's good. But right now it doesn't have required packages, like certain office & presentation tools, nor is the nVidia driver available. I'm pretty sure I won't be able to get VGA-out or TV-out working unless I install the proprietary nVidia driver. There is a hackish solution (http://forum.slitaz.org/viewtopic.php?id=223) in progress, though.

@C.M:

That review is okay; the author used some fairly hefty distros and environments, though. Zenwalk and Xubuntu, in particular. And apparently TinyMe worked better for him than it did for me. I've tried Zenwalk, and I've no intention of going back to it any time soon. Poor hardware support and terrible configurators and package manager. Though the latter apparently got a huge improvement, according to some recent articles.
05/26/08 @ 23:34
Comment from: Gurduloo [Visitor] Email
I have an old Toshiba Portege laptop - PII 366Mhz with 92meg of RAM. I was unable to get any Linux distros to install except Deli - and I wasn't satisfied with the packages available for that one. So I ended up doing a very basic install of FreeBSD on it. I tried a couple of window managers and settled on Fluxbox. It's definately more work than most linux distros and compiling takes forever on such an old machine, but the laptop is working great. FreeBSD has a reputation for bad hardware support, but older hardware is turning to be no problem at all.
05/27/08 @ 19:58
Comment from: Prootwadl [Visitor] Email · http://www.prootwadl.org
Two smaller LiveCDs that you might want to check out are Puppy Linux and Austrumi. Both are fairly lightweight, both are independently created (not based on anything else), and both allow for installation to a hard drive or USB drive. SLAX might also be worth a look (based on Slackware).
08/05/08 @ 22:20
Comment from: Stone3408 [Visitor] Email
Slitaz is a great distro. I was ready to
can my oldest laptop as other linux
distros such as unbuntu were even too much.
this has given it a stay of execution.
12/13/08 @ 21:40
Comment from: baikis [Visitor] Email · http://jpg.lt
how do you change font settings in xfce (xubuntu) to have this look 20080427-himerge1.png?
10/05/09 @ 06:23
Comment from: Josh Saddler [Member] Email · http://dev.gentoo.org/~nightmorph
@baikis:

Wow, old post. The original entry was a year ago . . . you realize that, right? :)

Anyway, Xubuntu is a special deal; I think they have their own appearance control center. But if not, here's what you can do:

1. Install the corefonts package. I think Ubuntu calls it msttcorefonts or similar.
2. Go to Settings -> Appearance -> Fonts
3. Set your system font to "Verdana" - mine is 10pt.
4. Uncheck "Enable anti-aliasing"
5. Change "Hinting" to "Slight"

This may not work for you, as the freetype library I use in Gentoo is compiled on my local box. Freetype has some usage restrictions that do not permit the best font hinter (the bytecode interpreter) to be enabled on redistributed freetype packages. Meaning the ones supplied by Xubuntu and every other binary distro out there.

So you may have to compile and install your own freetype library on your local machine, being sure to enable the bytecode interpreter so that you get the best possible font shapes. With Gentoo, it's automatic, since we're a source-based distribution: we don't distribute binaries; the users build them on their own machines. So we're free of the usage restriction placed on freetype.
10/05/09 @ 09:51
Comment from: Lennon [Visitor]
Slitaz is really cool! i've got a pretty old machine (IBM T30), but ever since i installed Slitaz, its been working like a dream. i gues it feels young again!
10/22/09 @ 23:53

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