Thanks and glad there still many 32 bit distro out there. I installed (and recorded on my channel 🥰) many 32 distros in Years 2024. What i like were Linux Mint DE, Emmabuntus DE, MX Linux, and I agree with Mageai 9. Of course Debian too. Sparky, Bunken Labs and VOID for even more minimalist choice.
I just knew you were going to forget to mention that the very oldest living Linux distribution, Slackware, has always supported 32-bit systems. With a full install you'll have everything you need and most of what you want. KDE Plasma, XFCE and several other window managers are included. If you're on a 64-bit machine, you'll want Slackware64. Say, you sound like a bot with all those wacky mispronunciations. Get Slack!
I have a 20-something-year-old pc that has windows 7 in it. Just so you get the idea, it's so old that it had XP on it before, and I'm not even sure if that was what it came with. It has ONLY 1 GB OF RAM. JUST ONE. It has two drives of around 100 GB. I tried LMDE 32 bit but it couldn't handle it. I'll be trying q4OS. I just want to give it a new use for basic tasks and, if possible, some heavier tasks like watching videos on youtube, music and photos. Thanks for the video!
@@celsopereira5255 I didn't understand the first part of your reply, I'm guessing you're asking the version of q4os I installed. I'm somewhat of a beginner on linux so lemme know, though I don't have the PC with me anymore, so sadly I cannot check that. But it went ok on that machine. The OS experience was smoother and a bit faster than with Windows 7, but sadly everything that is browsing through the internet was still really hard. I also struggled A LOT installing applications, especially the browser. Since this machine is so old, most browsers just don't support it (even some that are 32 bit). In the end, I had to install a "patched" version of Firefox ESR someone made, since the official one had some kind of issue that I don't remember right now. So yeah, somewhat heavy tasks like browsing on the internet take a looong time for the machine to process. It's not completely unusable, you can browse, but I wouldn't recommend using it for, say, watching TH-cam videos or drawing in Krita, AT ALL. It's better than not having a PC, but I guess you have to be more patient with it. I have to say though, at this point it wasn't the OS that was limiting it, but the hardware resources themselves are too limited and small for a lot of modern day tasks. I suggest finding lightweight software alternatives if you have a machine like this. I don't discard machines that aren't as old as this one would handle it all better. You know, everything helps, even if that's just installing Linux. If it makes the machine even a little bit more usable, it's a win for me.
I Started using Slax all the time around 2k4/5 I think. I thought it was Killer to make my own Tiny Portable Distro fort he Mini-Dvd's I Love Mint XFCE x86
Thanks and glad there still many 32 bit distro out there. I installed (and recorded on my channel 🥰) many 32 distros in Years 2024. What i like were Linux Mint DE, Emmabuntus DE, MX Linux, and I agree with Mageai 9. Of course Debian too. Sparky, Bunken Labs and VOID for even more minimalist choice.
Man ,I tried using peppermint but it had some repository errors
I just knew you were going to forget to mention that the very oldest living Linux distribution, Slackware, has always supported 32-bit systems. With a full install you'll have everything you need and most of what you want.
KDE Plasma, XFCE and several other window managers are included.
If you're on a 64-bit machine, you'll want Slackware64.
Say, you sound like a bot with all those wacky mispronunciations.
Get Slack!
Sure is - what's Ly Nox ?
Can you video of Linux Ditro for Beginners? And video of Linux Laptops.
Lynix, then leanucks, then Linux. A long walk to a short achievement.
I have a 20-something-year-old pc that has windows 7 in it. Just so you get the idea, it's so old that it had XP on it before, and I'm not even sure if that was what it came with. It has ONLY 1 GB OF RAM. JUST ONE. It has two drives of around 100 GB.
I tried LMDE 32 bit but it couldn't handle it. I'll be trying q4OS. I just want to give it a new use for basic tasks and, if possible, some heavier tasks like watching videos on youtube, music and photos. Thanks for the video!
Antix 19.5 or 17.4, Loc OS 22, Q4Os Trinity 32 bits, Devuan 4 or 03. How was going to you?
@@celsopereira5255 I didn't understand the first part of your reply, I'm guessing you're asking the version of q4os I installed. I'm somewhat of a beginner on linux so lemme know, though I don't have the PC with me anymore, so sadly I cannot check that.
But it went ok on that machine. The OS experience was smoother and a bit faster than with Windows 7, but sadly everything that is browsing through the internet was still really hard. I also struggled A LOT installing applications, especially the browser. Since this machine is so old, most browsers just don't support it (even some that are 32 bit). In the end, I had to install a "patched" version of Firefox ESR someone made, since the official one had some kind of issue that I don't remember right now.
So yeah, somewhat heavy tasks like browsing on the internet take a looong time for the machine to process. It's not completely unusable, you can browse, but I wouldn't recommend using it for, say, watching TH-cam videos or drawing in Krita, AT ALL. It's better than not having a PC, but I guess you have to be more patient with it.
I have to say though, at this point it wasn't the OS that was limiting it, but the hardware resources themselves are too limited and small for a lot of modern day tasks. I suggest finding lightweight software alternatives if you have a machine like this. I don't discard machines that aren't as old as this one would handle it all better. You know, everything helps, even if that's just installing Linux. If it makes the machine even a little bit more usable, it's a win for me.
You might want to try a variant of Puppy Linux, that OS will run just about any old Pc
Loc OS
Emmabuntus
have a surface win rt arm32 bits tegra. Does anyone know of a version for that architecture? Regards!!!
Raspbian
Isn’t there a 32bit puppy Linux?
I Started using Slax all the time around 2k4/5 I think.
I thought it was Killer to make my own Tiny Portable Distro fort he Mini-Dvd's
I Love Mint XFCE x86
Deebian? hahaha
time waste video