Top 5 Linux Distros For Older Hardware

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 375

  • @ВасКо-в2с
    @ВасКо-в2с ปีที่แล้ว +113

    After installing the AntiX distribution kit on my home computer (2GB/80GB/AMD Athlon-64 X2 4200+), the computer came to life and it became comfortable to surf the Internet and watch videos on TH-cam without lag.

    • @Minja-i3z
      @Minja-i3z 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      No way. TH-cam videos wonŽt play correctly without smtube unless you have very good graphic card. These "distros for old hardware" are just waste of time. They use less ram but with 2 GB you are ok with even Ubuntu MATE if you are not starting more than few programmes at the same time. Ergonomy of these "distros for old hardware" tends to be problematic and they just save you some RAM but not CPU or graphic card. Linux Lite is XFCE distro - who would recommend that in favour of Linux Mint XFCE?

    • @potatoes5829
      @potatoes5829 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      @@Minja-i3z "youtube videos won't play correctly" my 5 yr old celeron would like to disagree.

    • @IIlI396
      @IIlI396 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Minja-i3z -🤓🤓

    • @JuanLopez-vf3mo
      @JuanLopez-vf3mo 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@potatoes5829hello. I do think that lightweight Linux distros are life saver for many old PCs. But 5 years old is not too old. In LATAM many people still use 10+ laptops and desktop PC. Greetings

    • @ByTNikhil
      @ByTNikhil 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      My almost 15 years old AMD Sempron 145 single core would like to disagree too even on windows 10 lmao. It plays videos smoothly on 720p ​@@potatoes5829

  • @tomcaldas
    @tomcaldas ปีที่แล้ว +141

    Any distro with XFCE works pretty well most of the time

    • @arnorobinwerkman
      @arnorobinwerkman ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Kde now a day is as light as xfce.
      I have arch kde running at idle about 600mb ram in use, nearly the same as xfce.

    • @abyass2240
      @abyass2240 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      ​@@arnorobinwerkmanare you sure mate mine was using over 1 gb when idle

    • @tomcaldas
      @tomcaldas ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@arnorobinwerkman it's not only about ram, KDE uses more CPU. On my old notebook (4gb of ram and intel Celeron) I could use gnome, but couldn't use KDE because of the CPU, it was really slow. I have an old laptop with 2gb of ram and an Intel Atom, KDE is just impossible to run, but XFCE runs pretty well.

    • @Redwan777
      @Redwan777 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      ​@@arnorobinwerkmanHow? I too use Arch and even just plasma-desktop and plasma-nm along with thier dependencies take about 1.5 GB memory while idle

    • @OpenBASED
      @OpenBASED ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Or Openbox.

  • @jeffcook3747
    @jeffcook3747 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Mint is my absolute favorite. Peppermint was good for a while too and I've used Linux Lite happily as well

  • @moetocafe
    @moetocafe 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Some small clarifications on hardware here :
    - Not all hardware is equal,
    - Not all hardware ages the same,
    - Desktop hardware will always outlive a laptop, in terms of performance and being able to run newer software,
    - Desktop hardware is much more upgradable and repairable, than a laptop.
    For example, my 10 yrs old machine is still better than many new budget laptops.
    I run a normal, up to date distro - hold your breath - and I run it on GNOME ! And it works nice.
    Actually, on my machine Win 10 also works nice. No gaming of course (but some games work too, of course not new ones), but it works with no problem.
    And I even don't have a discrete graphics card, I run on the CPU/mobo integrated graphics.

  • @michal1693
    @michal1693 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    recently i'm very happy how the instalation of arch linux went on core 2 duo, 4GB ram laptop. I was able to find in the AUR repository legacy broadcom wifi firmware and bluetooth (had problems with this in windows and had no idea how to do it in slackware linux). Don't use nvidia drivers, nouveau open source alternative works for desktop use just fine!

  • @_boux
    @_boux ปีที่แล้ว +2

    My stepdad had an old shitty laptop that he just used for facebook, printing stuff and playing 60s rock on his Sonos. I tried so many distros, ubuntu32 and 64 bit, raw arch with xfce, linux mint with cinnamon and xfce, antix. All of them would just not go well with the hardware, the graphics would just jumble up randomly, fonts would not render in the correct spot, and randomly switch out letters for no reason, UI components turning into black boxes or just looking like NES cartridge tilt. It looked like the graphics memory would just corrupt in all of these distros. Then I tried the new Peppermint OS, no issue whatsoever, it's my new go-to for old hardware.

  • @frankysour
    @frankysour ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Been blown away by mabox 2 days back......

  • @emem666
    @emem666 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm not much concerned about distro names as much as desktop environment choices. With more RAM I would go with XFCE or Trinity, with less RAM and very old CPUs I would choose LXDE. Q4OS Trinity is easy to setup to look like old Windows. There are also other good choices like Fluxbox, IceWM, Moksha / Enlightenment. Any PC that runs KDE Plasma, GNOME, Cinnamon, Budgie, Pantheon, Deepin, UKUI, LXQT or MATE without problems I wouldn't consider to be old in performance.

  • @Ferran-Gnu-Linux
    @Ferran-Gnu-Linux ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Arch Linux + LXDE is a really light distribution. Only you need install the base packages + Xorg + LXDE + Lxdm and enable the services. With 1 Gb RAM + 2 Gb Swap you will have a great distro.

    • @AceOfBased
      @AceOfBased ปีที่แล้ว +4

      You forgot to mention whom you recommend Arch to, what kind of people? Btw, I don't use Arch.

    • @Ferran-Gnu-Linux
      @Ferran-Gnu-Linux ปีที่แล้ว

      @@AceOfBased Currently everybody can install Arch Linux with the command "archinstall", but not a rookie, better an intermediate user in my opinion. The Arch installer will guide you easily for several options you want. Here in youtube exists a lot of videos how install Arch with archinstall.

  • @FrankCastiglione
    @FrankCastiglione ปีที่แล้ว +1

    "Ancient Hardware". Cool expression!

    • @MsDuketown
      @MsDuketown ปีที่แล้ว

      It's a statement for kernel6 lovers.

  • @dani45987
    @dani45987 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you, Q4OS looks so clean!!l

  • @konradkoeppe2840
    @konradkoeppe2840 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Linux lite and anti x are my go to for older machines

  • @JohnRambo-e3u
    @JohnRambo-e3u 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Which of these has high graphic interface with low RAM usage? I am looking for a beautiful look to make a new stand alone HTPC. Older dell 7010, 24Tb HDD. 8gb Ram. I am retiring my WinXP gaming PC that was running Librelec with a 2TB upgrade.

  • @trendshunter
    @trendshunter ปีที่แล้ว +1

    LOC-OS Linux the #1 Distro for ancient laptop

  • @alexanderoransky7601
    @alexanderoransky7601 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Void linux is all you need for any weak CPU.

  • @trs5127
    @trs5127 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Running TinyCore through the terminal ✨

  • @Alegzander1990
    @Alegzander1990 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hmm, surprised MX Linux didn't make the cut. Doesn't necessarily advertise itself as "lightweight" but I found it to be pretty light.
    Actually runs way better than Linux Lite on family member's old machine I put it on.
    Funnily enough, at least in my experience, Linux Lite seemed quite "heavy" actually especially among the "lightweight" distros.

    • @pubcollize
      @pubcollize ปีที่แล้ว

      The one time I tried MX Linux, just a few months ago, on a potato 13" Intel Atom "Windows 7" laptop, it was stuttering the pagefile so bad I could barely even load up the Shutdown Menu. I don't remember when was the last time I've had such an experience, maybe on XP but even then only due to some hung software.
      Mind you this laptop has been running Debian with XFCE just fine out of the box with no tuning whatsoever.
      I don't know if I just got a bad release or if that's normal but it seems like MX just adds a lot cream and cherries to go along with a normal Debian and XFCE. If you want lightweight Debian with an XFCE desktop environment, then you probably don't want, don't need, or can't handle the doodaads MX preinstalls.

    • @Alegzander1990
      @Alegzander1990 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@pubcollize I think on older hardware it's recommend to use a swap partition instead of a file. Don't quote me on that though. Personally I use a partition always though.
      Anyway as for MX, like I said, that was my experience with it. Did you try Linux Lite on that potato ? How did it run by comparison ?

    • @pubcollize
      @pubcollize ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Alegzander1990 Come to think of it I was running it Live at that time, so take it or leave it but I wasn't impressed.
      No I didn't try Linux Lite, I'm not much of a hopper, and I don't even remember why I tried MX (def from a DT recommendation but I just don't remember why I bothered).
      That laptop works fine with Debian XFCE and the only thing it ever struggled with was that MX, otherwise it always exceeds my expectations. The keyboard is terrible and the power button is annoying but those aren't software issues.

    • @pubcollize
      @pubcollize ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I don't really get the point of any of these anyways, you want Debian install Debian, you want things to constantly break install Arch, then on top of those install whatever packages you want to install. What's the added benefit of all of these? It says "Linux Lite" but it's heavier than Debian with a prepackaged DE is it not?
      If these things are only good because they have an apt-get script with hundreds of packages then wouldn't it be "lite"-er to just download a bash script that does "apt-get install "? could even add a gui with checkboxes to it and call it Synaptic...

    • @Alegzander1990
      @Alegzander1990 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@pubcollize While I do also kinda lean towards the "pure" distros from a "philosophical" point of view, I don't necessarily agree that other flavors don't have their place.
      Got Debian running on PROXMOX in a container for Pi-Hole and Unbound and also have an Openmediavault (which is Debian based) VM for a NAS. Rock solid distros, all of them.
      Been running Mint on a family member's Laptop, then switched it to Manjaro and then to Endeavour OS after Manjaro decided to take away the codecs.
      Also dual booting Endeavour OS on my main PC alongside Windows 10 LTSC (on separate drives). Got systemd boot entry setup for Windows 10 aswel (was a pain) and I boot that so I get a boot menu.
      Don't actually agree with Arch (well Arch flavors in my case) breaking all the time either. At least not on my machines.
      Also been rock solid actually, and I'm no Linux expert by any means, but I've learned a lot in the past few years. I like to tinker with it though. Especially after I had to ditch Windows 7 as I didn't really want to move to Windows 10. Eventually settled on LTSC after a while for my Windows drive. Got my Endeavour OS install pretty much exactly the way I want it.
      Also gave Garuda a spin on my main machine a while back and it was pretty cool although a bit bloated and some things annoyed me so I moved to Endeavour OS straight after as it's as close to mainline Arch as you can get, but it's a little more user friendly.
      Rolling releases don't break that often, if at all, nowadays in my experience.

  • @leopard3131
    @leopard3131 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    For older hardware i suggest Slackware or Gentoo. Slackware is polished and stable while gentoo, with the use of flags, really allows you to tailor what is on your system. Custom kernels also help as you can again optimize your architecture.
    32 bit laptops are almost 20 years old i believe intel stopped manufacturing them in 2002.
    The biggest problem in 15+ year old machines is by far failing hardware especially RAM, hard drives, and to a lesser extent network or video cards . At a minimum i suggest you check the health of your hard drive and back up your data

    • @HikingFeral
      @HikingFeral ปีที่แล้ว

      I keep seeing people speak about Gentoo and I am pretty new but it looks worth checking out.

    • @leopard3131
      @leopard3131 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @HikingFeral It takes a lot of work and reading especially the USE flags

    • @the_sweetpotato9254
      @the_sweetpotato9254 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      ​@HikingFeral It takes a while to tailor it to your needs, and you really want a separate, much more modern, machine to do the compiling or else it will take forever. Gentoo wiki is really good so it not too hard, but it requires some time investment for setup and upkeep. Gentoo allows for really minimal setups, I have laptop that uses only around 60-80mb of ram while idling on desktop and it not even with just the bare minimum running.

    • @Returnality
      @Returnality ปีที่แล้ว

      Gentoo is a seriously mixed back for older hardware. On the one hand the performance gains from a fully compiled system are nice for older hardware, on the other hand actually compiling everything takes A G E S

    • @AceOfBased
      @AceOfBased ปีที่แล้ว

      How did you learn Gentoo and Slackware as a beginner? Because the documentation assume that you already know it all.

  • @Woodwerker
    @Woodwerker ปีที่แล้ว

    Peppermint Linux is my favorite one for weaker or older hardware.

  • @MattMcCullough
    @MattMcCullough 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Linux lite is my favorite distribution

  • @bkovacs7
    @bkovacs7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Derek I saw your video on Archbang Linux and thought you may want to do a video on Crunchbang++ Linux. Which is now based on Debian 12.

  • @jozsefizsak
    @jozsefizsak ปีที่แล้ว

    Much appreciated!

  • @VittoIB
    @VittoIB ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video. Some of these would be great on my Pinebook Pro. Running Archlinux on it right now with Sway, and it's pretty smooth.

  • @m0r4ag
    @m0r4ag ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Would be nice if you give it a try to a lightweight distro called “Loc-OS” to give it a shout out to the Spanish-talking people

    • @RHTORAS
      @RHTORAS ปีที่แล้ว +1

      he won't because it is systemD free... and don't be fooled by antix he couldn't do otherwise

  • @ilyasnamozov2914
    @ilyasnamozov2914 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What Linux Distro will suit Pentium 1 90 Mghz laptop?

  • @michaelcox9855
    @michaelcox9855 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have a Pentium 4 machine still operational running Antix 32 bit. I do need to update it though.

  • @LoganKaval
    @LoganKaval 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I put mabox on a 2016 mac book pro. I miss the wifi and touch bar. (I did switch it to Linux Mint and I installed the kde desktop environment with a ethernet dongle.)

  • @lifeonground
    @lifeonground ปีที่แล้ว

    i'm using gnome distro on a 10 year old thinkpad w530 and it's rocking. windows 10 and 11 sucks on such an old machine (even if i have 1tb and 16gb ram).
    by the way, it's fedora 44.5 running.

  • @tenfourproductionsllc
    @tenfourproductionsllc ปีที่แล้ว

    Antix is the one I use with older computers, personally Linux Mint XFCE > Linux Lite.... Puppy and Q4OS are too quirky for me.

  • @bramvandenbroeck5060
    @bramvandenbroeck5060 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Giving Q4OS on a potato laptop a chance, have been looking for a lightweight linux for a while because windows 10 chugs on that poor celeron n4000 with soldered 4gb of ram, how brutal to solder on the ram . . .

  • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115
    @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Mabox, the only Arch that orked for me... The most handsome Openbx out there.

  • @freespeechdead8670
    @freespeechdead8670 ปีที่แล้ว

    downloaded and going to try puppy right now lol

  • @icountu
    @icountu 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Try MiniOS 😊

  • @kpcraftster6580
    @kpcraftster6580 ปีที่แล้ว

    Bodhi, while it's not for me, has a reputation for doing well on older 32-bit systems.
    Strong agree on Puppy.
    Agree on Arch, of course.
    Weak agree on Lite (it's basically xfce Mint, thus easy to break, hard to fix).
    Mabox I don't know enough, to have an educated opinion.
    Disagree with installing Antix or Q4OS on any computer, though I like the Trinity DE.

  • @thomashovgaard3134
    @thomashovgaard3134 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Linux Lite constantly freezes on my older laptop. PopOS and Endevaour are both snappy on the same potato.
    It doesnt make sense.

  • @danio3d8
    @danio3d8 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    i dont know if thats your real ip dt, but you should hide external ip in right widget at the beggining of the video, stay safe

  • @samuelbanya
    @samuelbanya 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Puppy Linux sucks for its ISO flashing to a USB flashdrive. They should make it so that you can use BalenaEtcher.

  • @Explorer982
    @Explorer982 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Slax, Tiny, DSL

  • @riufq
    @riufq ปีที่แล้ว

    Does Q4os can play games?

  • @TarunSamal
    @TarunSamal ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Kindly add Bodhi to List

  • @drakekoefoed1642
    @drakekoefoed1642 ปีที่แล้ว

    missing is the recommendation. what is the best for a machine that is super slow with ubuntu 18?

  • @m4rt_
    @m4rt_ ปีที่แล้ว

    arch ftw

  • @richharr
    @richharr 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Im running ubuntu on my casio calculator watch

  • @IMBREISGAU
    @IMBREISGAU 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Gnome is too awesome to run on 180kg laptops from 1776, unfortunately.

  • @bigmikeobama5314
    @bigmikeobama5314 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    old laptops run faster than they did when they were brand new with modern linux distros even ones that arent light

  • @Tweaker420666
    @Tweaker420666 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    depends on the potato. i have a desktop with an amd phenom ii processor from 2008-9. Thing is at least 14, maybe older. Upgraded to an ssd, maxxed out the ram (16GB max) And I have no problem running KDE inside Ubuntu Studio. Gfx card is an onboard HD4200.

  • @rikhardfsoss
    @rikhardfsoss ปีที่แล้ว +8

    or just install debian 32bit with the wm of your choice...
    maybe even #!CB++

  • @RobertTreat9
    @RobertTreat9 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    Running on Antix on a 1.6 Ghz Atom with 2 G DDR2 Ram circa 2008. Runs nice. Apps are kinda snappy. Nothing will get web browsing going anywhere near acceptable but use it as an audio server, basically.

    • @JoseMariadeManila-g3f
      @JoseMariadeManila-g3f หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      AntiX is actually the best for potatoes despite its toned-down graphics. But how did you find surfing on TH-cam, where there dropped frames or video lags observed with jsut 2GB of RAM? Were you able to watch videos on at least 720P?

  • @icristian6707
    @icristian6707 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Doesn't really matter...the moment you open internet browser you are doomed

  • @smudgey5000
    @smudgey5000 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    A note about using Rolling releases like Arch. If the old PC you are installing it on isn't used much and is kept in a drawer or stored away most of the time you shouldn't use a rolling release but instead should go for an LTS or a point release if you are the type that don't want to or dont know how to fix any issues that may happen from no updating the machine. I had an old machine running Manjaro that was left alone for 6-8 months. It had 1000 package updates and there was an issue preventing it from updating that I had to fix for it to work. Similar thing happened to Solus.

    • @kylewillett9817
      @kylewillett9817 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      YES! I once compiled Gentoo for some old 2GB of RAM systems thinking it would be optimized for that processor, did custom kernel and everything and never planned how bad updates would be 6 months later! Yikes!

    • @macblink
      @macblink 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      which LTS distros you recommend then? need it for an old laptop that isn't used much

    • @smudgey5000
      @smudgey5000 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@macblink Something Ubuntu based like Linux Mint or Linux Lite. I'd stay away from Vanilla Ubuntu unless you got the specs to handle gnome. Stay away from stuff like Xubuntu, Kubuntu, Lubuntu, and Ubuntu MATE as well because they are only supported for 3 years instead of 5.

  • @mamalujo2003
    @mamalujo2003 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Hey DT, You mentioned Crunchbang; is Crunchbang++ the same/similar? Would it rank among your list? Thanks.

    • @burgerkingen
      @burgerkingen ปีที่แล้ว +4

      It is identical, with minor changes to keep it up to date. Been my daily driver for over a year, the best.

  • @moshesabovich9362
    @moshesabovich9362 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Q4OS is the best! They only use 1GB on trinity and looks great and super fast! Even Firefox n TH-cam are fast!

  • @deultima
    @deultima ปีที่แล้ว +34

    I have personally gravitated towards EndeavourOS for all my older machines as it basically is just Arch made easy. After testing a bunch of distros, EndeavourOS just wins every time with how smooth of an experience I have. Debian comes in at a close second if you need more stability, but having access to a modern rolling release wins in my book.

    • @jameswhittaker9553
      @jameswhittaker9553 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      will it run on my raspberry pi zero 2w?

  • @dappermuis5002
    @dappermuis5002 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Puppy Linux iso's were so confusing to someone that barely knows Linux, that I gave up on it and went with Zoren lite, even though my laptop (17 years old), It was about 2 years older than the oldest recomendation for it. But it works. Wouldn't watch videos on it. But I can listen to music, search the net and use office Libre. And look at pictures. And won't play games. Unless something very very basic. But that is ok. It has basickly been turned into a workstation for one of my brother's kids. So he didn't hog the main pc.

  • @themisterchristie
    @themisterchristie ปีที่แล้ว +33

    Puppy Linux was one of the first live distros I ever used and the best running live. They were and are still an amazing distro.

    • @ratansharma8026
      @ratansharma8026 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Recently I downloaded and used Puppy Linux in my OracleVM and it was awesome - lightweight and fast. But the main thing I needed a Linux OS was for running Hadoop and related programs, and these days everyone uses ubuntu based distros so setting up Puppy Linux was difficult for me, as I found less support online for the problems I faced. Hence now I am looking for lightweight Ubuntu or Debian based distros for a comfortable learning journey in Big Data. If you could tell me what I should go for - like Lubuntu or Linux Lite, it would be a great help.

    • @SumRndmPenguin
      @SumRndmPenguin 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ratansharma8026 antix seems to be debian based. I'm going to try it soon.

    • @dreamybull1509
      @dreamybull1509 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@ratansharma8026??? there is a puppy Linux based on ubuntu 20.4

    • @pfyearwood1
      @pfyearwood1 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I use Sparky with openbox on an eMachine525 with a single core Intel, 4Gig ram. It's Debian based and comes in 32/64 bit. It can be loaded into RAM.
      I used Puppy and antiX in the past and try them every few versions to keep in touch. I find it cheaper to change OS then laptop.

    • @AbdulGhani-vm6oq
      @AbdulGhani-vm6oq 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@ratansharma8026I recommend lubuntu.

  • @devranjan665
    @devranjan665 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I found Zorin OS Lite lightweight and better than Linux Lite. I am using Zorin OS Lite 17 now on my Lenovo T400 ( intel Core 2 Duo Processor, 8 GB DDR3 RAM, 240 GB SSD + 500 GB HDD). I wanted a Debian/ubuntu based distro to use and that is why I have chosen this distro. Working fine till now.

  • @hindigente
    @hindigente 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Have used Linux Lite for a while (~4 years) and it's been a great experience so far. Can't say the same for other lightweight distros, like Lubuntu.

    • @theshinken
      @theshinken 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Lubuntu doesn't even claim to be lightweight these days anymore. It's just the LXQt spin of Ubuntu.

    • @activelivingchallenger4298
      @activelivingchallenger4298 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What issues have u had with lubuntu? I've had none

    • @theshinken
      @theshinken 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@activelivingchallenger4298 He probably tried to run it with little RAM. Lubuntu once had the advantage of being one of the most lightweight Ubuntu spins mostly because of LXDE but since the change to LXQt even the Lubuntu devs themselves don't claim to be more lightweight than other Ubuntu spins

  • @green9624
    @green9624 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I still have a really old Samsung laptop, 32 bits, 512 mb, from around 2005. Tried Puppy, AntiX, Devuan. Ended up with debian. The machine is so slow, can't even run xfce properly, so it runs lxde, openbox and icewm. Booting time is about 2 minutes. It's practically impossible to run any modern web browser with that cpu and memory. But still possible to play old DOS and ZX Spectrum games with dosbox and fuse.

  • @valdez66667
    @valdez66667 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I often look at these videos and would try many of these suggestions. I have been "playing" with Linux for a long time (90's). I guess I am not pushing the old Macbook Air 2011 (4GB/256GB/i7) to much. It is my coffee shop, simple surf and remote into my home network. It handles all this fine. For the longest time I would always just come back to Linux Mint, it is a very impressive OS. But I would always tire and try something different, yes distro hopping. ; ) So counter to what is considered right, I have been using Fedora with GNOME and it has been GREAT.

  • @linuxrant
    @linuxrant ปีที่แล้ว +11

    wow, I am glad you changed your mind about Q4OS I definitely think this distro deserves the spot :) It is the smoothest KDE Plasma experience someone can have on a 32 bit computer (on 64bit as well ofc). And it is really convenient for an ex-windows user.
    I remember once you saying: "why not just install debian with kde??"

  • @quantanglement
    @quantanglement 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    How would any of these do on an imac? 17" 2006 2 GB ram. (it runs snow leopard now) 2.0 ghz Cor 2 duo (64 bit? - it's in storage - think I have the specs right). And can you use a thumb drive on this to boot up and add an OS?

  • @swagmuffin9000
    @swagmuffin9000 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Running pop os on a 2012 imac, runs great, and wifi worked out of the box which was nice. Xubuntu works well on my mom's 2009 mac laptop. Wish I would have switched to linux earlier

    • @finaldaylight3804
      @finaldaylight3804 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      can confirm, PopOs runs well on old computers

    • @lovol2
      @lovol2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Pop 22.04 is so slow for me on old laptops, with spinning disks.

  • @Sagar-im
    @Sagar-im ปีที่แล้ว +2

    puppy linux.....good but not for newbies
    linux lite is actually not lite

    • @RHTORAS
      @RHTORAS ปีที่แล้ว +1

      linux lite is not light you are correct but dt showed it because he had to include systemD distros and simply showed antix only because it is based on a systemD distro Debian... otherwise he could show the real light distros like adelie, tinycore, tinypaw, slitaz, taz, devuanpup and so on...

  • @khalilovitch_
    @khalilovitch_ ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Cool video, not long ago I installed antiX on an old vaio laptop with 1GB of ram.

    • @ginobarsotti2455
      @ginobarsotti2455 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sorry to necro, but I have a similar laptop hanging around... How was your experience with that setup? Did you try other OS on? What about navigation? Any info is apreciated

    • @khalilovitch_
      @khalilovitch_ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ginobarsotti2455 Hey, to be honest I didn't use it for long but it was running smoothly overall except when using the browser It was a bit slow. I haven't used it since that time, I'm thinking of installing arch on it.

  • @ptrinx6610
    @ptrinx6610 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Old intel hp used to run Xfce but not anymore is getting to heavy , lite linux was around 900 mb in idle!!! For years I was running opensuse leap (net install) with my personal openbox configs and was great. Now arch linux minimal install with a WM (i3 or sway) it took me several days to take care of the hardware acceleration - thanks arch wiki - and with upgrade ram, new keyboard and a ssd is flying ...

  • @laurencejohnson4106
    @laurencejohnson4106 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    For 32 bit systems I use Sparky Linux LXQT., and it currently does the job very well. For 64 bit systems I use Linux Mint Mate edition.

  • @edbeckerich3737
    @edbeckerich3737 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The Debian installer allows you to not install a desktop, so you can build it up from scratch much like Arch Linux. It is good for minimal installs too

    • @kutyajani249
      @kutyajani249 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      That's how I use it. Openbox+Lxpanel. Arch is not good for a new linux user, because it shits itself after 3 months of updates. Then what does grandma do with it?
      My experience in terms of reliability:
      Debian Stable -> 2 years until the first serious problem
      Debian Testing, Ubuntu LTS -> 6 months...
      Debian Unstable, Arch -> 3 months...
      I don't mind someone telling you how good Arch is, just add, I beg you, that you will suck with it sooner or later(sooner). Use it if you like challenges. And then I'll take it. But not like this...

    • @edbeckerich3737
      @edbeckerich3737 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@kutyajani249 I will only say that once you have learned your way around Arch, you learn to take its problems in stride, at least I do. I installed it on my new AMD + Nvidia card system, and game on it. I installed it with BTRFS and Timeshift with roll backs, haven't rolled back yet..

    • @kutyajani249
      @kutyajani249 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@edbeckerich3737 ,
      Not yet, but you will soon. But at least you know what you're doing... BTRFS is a good option. It simply irritates and triggers me, because he recommends a system without going into much detail about its nuances.If someone, say a novice, jumps into this, he can easily get a slap in the face and may never come back to the world of linux, saying that "linux" is bad and unreliable.

  • @gor.
    @gor. ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Last two seconds of the video tho. BASED.

  • @stephenwilson0386
    @stephenwilson0386 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Honestly I've changed my mind on "light" distros. I have a ~2009 ThinkPad T500, and I've found that modern desktops tend to run just as well or better. For example I went through several installs, including Debian w/ XFCE, Mint Mate, Arch with bspwm, etc. Every time, I missed the features of GNOME which is my favorite, plus there would be weird hiccups like menus and apps not loading all the way or taking a long time and dealing with screen tearing. So I installed openSUSE with GNOME and have had zero issues - things feel nearly as responsive and smooth as my much more powerful AMD rig that I built in 2020. I don't care for KDE, but seems like the more mainstream desktops have put in a lot of work to optimize resource usage and it shows.

    • @BWGPEI
      @BWGPEI ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I also have a ThinkPad T500. I upped the RAM to 6 GB and swapped in an SSD, then loaded Mint 64-bit with the Cinnamon desktop. Got the Calibre E-Book manger installed and then added the entire Baen Free Library. I'm really happy with that setup.

    • @HappyCheeryChap
      @HappyCheeryChap ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah it's interesting with people getting into Linux/distros, I've been into this stuff since the 90s, and have often reflected on the fun/emotional aspect that draws us in, despite telling myself that I've always just been doing this for "practical" purposes only.
      We have all these choices & options for customizing things when it comes to Linux desktops especially, which is a big part of the fun of it all. As an analogy... Windows/Mac are like "regular pre-built toys"... and Linux distros are like Lego. The setup/building/freedom/creativity are where the fun is! (not for everyone, but for us at least)
      So when we have a low-spec computer, we think... "this is the perfect opportunity to find something new and specialized!", and that adds some more fun and novelty. I've done it many times myself, but yeah, like you're saying... in the end it often doesn't really make that much difference, unless you have a really really slow computer / special use case. And on top of this, sometimes it's worth losing a little bit of performance for more useful features, or just having consistency and not needing to deal with multiple ways/setups of doing the same thing.
      All subjective of course, but has been interesting analyzing my own psychology on this kinda thing. And I'm always reminded of it when I see people writing threads asking for suggestions, and talking about how much time/effort/bikeshedding people sometimes put into this kind of premature optimization, that likely never would have had much thought put into it were the sea of options not available in the first place. Can easily fall into "analysis paralysis", which I guess is basically what distro-hopping can be sometimes.
      But hey... it is fun. Just worth thinking about for anybody like me who might find they're spending too much time on the wrong things.
      Ah yeah, on desktop performance... it's not really the distro that matters anyway. It's more the choice of window manager / desktop environment. These days I mostly just stick with Debian on everything.

    • @BWGPEI
      @BWGPEI ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh very nicely said! I had to retire, and the old test bed system gives me something to keep the old brain cells rattling about. But the daily drivers all run Mint / Cinnamon because that (a) gets rid of Microsoft, (b) is comfortable for old MS Windows users, and (c) is consistent for maintenance / updates / upgrades. Very necesary to me is that Mint runs happily on everything from the old T-500 to the last Ryzen build. The only distro-hopping we do is on that test bed system, and the other half doesn't often want to look at a new distro. @@HappyCheeryChap

    • @CFWhitman
      @CFWhitman ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Screen tearing can be an issue with lighter weight desktops/window managers if you don't have a compositor running (or sometimes even if you have a software compositor). I've found that using picom (you can often still use compton if it's included, but picom is a newer fork) will eliminate this and sometimes improves performance by taking some of the processing load from the CPU and giving it to the GPU instead. Of course a later Core 2 Duo is more powerful than some of the machines that really need a lighter weight distro.

    • @vibrantneon.
      @vibrantneon. 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Running Pop_OS on a t420, with like 16 gigs of ram, and an SSD, and it's honestly really great for me. I'm good with the defaults for now, but might work towards more i3/awesomeWM at some point. I'm new to linux and been using linux for a few months as a desktop OS, but have used it here and there prior.
      Tried Minte Mate, Mint Cinnamon, Ubuntu, and Pop_OS works for now with their custom Gnome. Fits my needs at the moment, and I'm pretty content for now.

  • @richhenry8004
    @richhenry8004 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I run FreeBSD 14 + i3wm on a E8500 Core 2 Duo w/4Gb from 2008, runs fine including chromium + youtube over wifi. Totally usable computer.

  • @a1g0rhythm
    @a1g0rhythm ปีที่แล้ว +2

    What about the availability of additional applications? Can new users easily find and install the programs or games that complete their experience? This is a big drawback for many new users.

    • @hindigente
      @hindigente 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You can install anything straight from the upstream Ubuntu repository in Linux Lite, and I suppose things work similarly for most other lightweight distros. Whether programs will function smoothly or not depends on potatoes' specs.

  • @CheapMobileGeek
    @CheapMobileGeek 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I don't think its 'Ant-tix'...I think it sounds more like 'ant-teeks'...which is what the OS was designed for...older computers.

  • @fubaralakbar6800
    @fubaralakbar6800 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Ubuntu Server with tiling window manager

  • @Schattennebel
    @Schattennebel 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I am using a Potato right now, running Lubuntu 22.04.03 LTS and it runs good enough for my taste.
    Q9300, 8GB DDR2, 128 GB SSD, GTX 960 - a bit slow from time to time but mostly usable.
    Linux Mint should work aswell but I wanted to stay at a Ubuntu-Flavor since on my main system runs Kubuntu.

  • @omega3fatass61
    @omega3fatass61 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    i love these style videos! I freaking LOVE MABOX. Tried Q4OS a bit, but the packages and system had too many issues for me for some reason trying to use node and some other programming stuff. But Trinity desktop is awesome

  • @fletcherriverwood8964
    @fletcherriverwood8964 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    My old HP ze2000 only has 2GB ram with an 18 year old processor AMD Turion MT-30, and I'm running the latest version Manjaro with kernel 6.5.3, some major distributions runs on old hardware just fine. Linux is awesome, thank you.

  • @MarioinRmd
    @MarioinRmd ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Of course I understand your point Mr. DT, but the irony (or perhaps even more aptly stated, truth..) of your initial statement is that once you switch your older computer to Linux, it's no longer a potato. 😀

  • @norbydroid3430
    @norbydroid3430 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    On my old potato dual core 2ghz 3gb ram system I dual boot XP and Linux with q4os Trinity. I may try one of these other dostros ya mentioned. Thank you.

  • @JamesMcCloskey
    @JamesMcCloskey ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Zorin Os Lite?

  • @HistoricaLinux
    @HistoricaLinux 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks for your top 5 recommendation.
    I tested install several distro to my old 32bit 2 Gb laptop.. AntiX, MXLinux, Q4OS... and my recommend is MXLinux because it was more user friendly than the three of them. Also, Debian 12, OpenSUSE, Mageia 9, all have their 32 bit edition and with 2 Gb RAM + Intel core 2 duo, basic office and browsing need are okay. I documented all my tested in my channel as well....

    • @Dynamiclyricsshorts
      @Dynamiclyricsshorts 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Thanks now I will try it I was finding commenter like you

  • @FeelingShred
    @FeelingShred 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    so... it's 2024... are there distros that come with pre-installed WINE out of the gate besides Zorin OS?
    and is Puppy Linux of today fully compatible with Ryzen generation of processors? (and APU graphics)

    • @FeelingShred
      @FeelingShred 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      does Zorin OS even exist 🤣I liked it when I tested an older version of it, nothing wrong with it, it just ran a bit too slowly directly from the flash drive, hopefully modern releases addressed that

  • @rivubardhan6376
    @rivubardhan6376 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Why bodhi is not in the list?

  • @RHTORAS
    @RHTORAS ปีที่แล้ว +4

    For older computers the only sollution is NOSYSTEMD
    1. Adelie Linux (prove me wrong)
    2. Antix Linux
    3. Slitaz Linux
    4. Miyo Linux
    5. Tinycore Linux
    as for puppy devuanpup or void pup are the way to go
    I would also add Void Linux but this is better to "best linux for every case".

  • @TheRatchetmeister
    @TheRatchetmeister 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

    HP Elitebook 8470p with Broadcom WiFi card. B43. I can't get this to work with Linux Ubuntu Noble Numbat, and I'd like to boot things up, so I can figure out how to upgrade things a little bit more. Help.

  • @Hoztag3
    @Hoztag3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Q4os is elite

    • @JasperPlays
      @JasperPlays ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm using it. Best balance between performance and usability.

    • @Hoztag3
      @Hoztag3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@JasperPlays very lightweight too 800mb iso

    • @riufq
      @riufq ปีที่แล้ว

      Can it play games?

    • @Hoztag3
      @Hoztag3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@riufq with the correct dependancies

    • @riufq
      @riufq ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Hoztag3 I'm Linux newbie here. Currently I'm using kubuntu. I'm installing minecraft with .deb extensions.
      It's said, the dependencies not supported. But other apps, with .deb extension like steam, are working.
      Do you know why?

  • @JoseMariadeManila-g3f
    @JoseMariadeManila-g3f หลายเดือนก่อน

    Linux Lite is not as light as stated because it uses more or less 1GB of RAM upon boot up. Linux Mint and MX Linux will do better in terms of minimal memory consumption. Yes, Bodhi needs less RAM but its Moksha environment is not as user friendly for converts from Windows. Glaringly omitted from the list was AntiX Linux that uses only between 198 to 250MB of RAM, despite its toned-down graphics.

  • @knowledgepower3558
    @knowledgepower3558 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Puppy Linux has always been my go to after finding back in 2009. Unfortunately I had old hardware and trying to run this Ubuntu disk I received in the mail the old days 😢
    Trying to install Bookworm Puppy on a Lenovo idea pad. It's was only 40 dollars. Windows is OK but it doesn't have a lot of storage space at 38gb. This is my I don't know done loss count of how many times I attempted to install Puppy on here here I go again.😂
    .

  • @LinuxProInstalls
    @LinuxProInstalls 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Can a Lenovo Thinkpad L520 laptop made in the year 2011 with 5GB of ram, a HDD drive with 300GB, and a 64 bit CPU work with Linux lite

  • @rdnowlin1206
    @rdnowlin1206 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have Debian xfce running on a AMD Athlon II system w/ 4GB ram, 512 MB video. Works great.

  • @tomas-wi8dy
    @tomas-wi8dy ปีที่แล้ว +7

    other good choise:
    Elive
    Slax
    CrunchBang++
    Bodhi Linux
    WM Live

    • @tomas-wi8dy
      @tomas-wi8dy ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@burgerkingen I agree! My list isn't a top, just a random list

    • @tomas-wi8dy
      @tomas-wi8dy ปีที่แล้ว

      @@burgerkingen - important to mention, CB++ have an i686 32bit version of the latest bookworm. So IT'S GOLD

  • @himneeshchowdhary820
    @himneeshchowdhary820 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Does anyone know any 32 bit linux distro which can run on less than 256mb RAM?

  • @EZBlast
    @EZBlast ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Zorin Lite OS is very nice as well.

  • @imnemo2327
    @imnemo2327 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Arch runs smooth on old hardware.

  • @LappDog
    @LappDog หลายเดือนก่อน

    Alpine Linux or NetBSD would be my choice.

  • @ChingasoClown
    @ChingasoClown 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Can you do a video on puppy linux ? It does not work like a standard linux distro,

  • @maxoverridemax
    @maxoverridemax 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Running hp pavilion 502n. Don't judge me.😎

  • @r8sk
    @r8sk 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    thanks, but what does ''distro'' mean?

  • @rahuldsouza1985
    @rahuldsouza1985 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    What about lububtu and lxqt spiral Linux

  • @akosmarton8339
    @akosmarton8339 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have a MSI Wind U200 I run Manjaro KDE on it. I think you can use whatever Linux distros it doesn't affect performance. The bottleneck is the webbrowser they hold every machine back and it doesn't matter what distro you are using.

    • @Kalasklister1337
      @Kalasklister1337 ปีที่แล้ว

      With a somewhat beefier system i would agree. If you have something really old that still has a spinning hard drive and limited ram, from experience i would say that the main things that matter are a) init system. Big difference in overall snappiness and boot time b) replacing all your day to day apps with leaner ones. Antix is particularly great IMO since they have a large selection of replacements for pretty much all of the productivity apps you might need. They even try to give you a light weight YT streaming app so you don't need to open a browser to view online videos c) Sad to say this but use chromium instead of firefox. It is significantly faster and makes a difference on low end hw. d) lean window manager instead of full desktop env (duh)

    • @ottolehikoinen6193
      @ottolehikoinen6193 ปีที่แล้ว

      Advertisements and complex cookies will kill many old computers.

  • @commentsarefree4311
    @commentsarefree4311 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Just installed Puppy and Kodi on a 2009 N130 laptop. Runs like a charm ! Great video, thanks !