Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
HardInfo sows about 350MB used immediately after booting. Maybe that isn't accurate. What do you use to measure RAM usage?
I know about the alternate installer. I've used it before. I mentioned the RAM usage of the standard installer because I didn't see that Pentium4 is going to upgrade the RAM. With 768MB or 1GB, the standard installer should work.
That might be the best option for software and hardware support.
Does Debian really need eight CDs or three DVDs?
Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
Try my Debian 7.7 suggestion with xorg + lxde. It uses less than 50MB DRAM after bootup on your typical P4. That leaves plenty of DRAM for applications, linux disk cache, etc.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
I tried running Lubuntu on a 256MB DRAM system and while it works, it is dreadfully slow slow slow. 512MB DRAM will give good performance with a browser and a few open tabs.
I think the standard graphical installer needs about 800MB of RAM.
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/re....04.1/release/
Alternate install image
The alternate install image allows you to perform certain specialist installations of Lubuntu. It provides for the following situations:
setting up automated deployments;
upgrading from older installations without network access;
LVM and/or RAID partitioning;
installs on systems with less than about 384MiB of RAM (although note that low-memory systems may not be able to run a full desktop environment reasonably).Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
I have tried a lot of light weight OS like Puppy, Damn Small Linux, Tiny Core, Slitaz, etc.
While they work on older machines, the biggest problem with the above mentioned OS is that they don't get updated very often with security patches or the latest applications.
The developers for the above are very small teams (sometimes one person) and understandably, they have a job, life, etc so maintenance of their distributions is a best effort basis.Last edited by retiredcaps; 11-30-2014, 06:06 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
I was thinking about asking the same thing. I want to find something that runs as well as Windows XP on old computers. I think Puppy Linux was the closest to XP so far, but it still seems slower (mainly due to poor video performance). It seems like most distributions use a lot of RAM, and it's hard to find one that runs well with less than 1GB of RAM.
Lubuntu definitely won't run well (if at all) on that amount of RAM. I've had it running in a virtual machine with 512MB of RAM, and it used most of that with no programs running. I think the standard graphical installer needs about 800MB of RAM.
Are those three Nichicon HMs in that picture bulging slightly? It looks like they are in the picture, but I've seen caps that looked like they were bulging in a picture and looked fine in reality.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
+1 for Lubuntu. I have been using 14.04 (LTS) since April 2014 and it is solid.
The default Lubuntu comes with potentially unwanted daemons, startup programs, etc. By default it uses about 150MB DRAM. By un-installing some stuff, you can get to less than 100MB DRAM.
For RAM constrained systems, try Debian 7.7 (stable) and follow these instructions
http://l3net.wordpress.com/2013/04/3...-from-scratch/
On a P4 with 512MB DRAM and installing
apt-get install xorg
apt-get install lxde
and a little bit of removing of some default daemons, the system easily uses less than 50 (fifty) MB DRAM.
Add a simple firewall like
apt-get install ufw
ufw enable
Total disk space install should be less than 2GB for linux + applications.Last edited by retiredcaps; 11-30-2014, 05:55 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
23-Jul-2014 00:15 696M Desktop image for PC (Intel x86) computers (standard download)
http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/re...sktop-i386.isoLeave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
Always appreciate your input WesterWhen did HM/HN start production? I've never seen any HM from 2006 fail, and I personally have a 945 board, 100% nichicon HM (Date codes early-mid 2006) for all the filtering, and they have survived over 35,000 hours of "torture" powering a Pentium 4 Prescott. It's actually still being used, except with a Pentium D now.
HMs in 2001 and HNs in 2002, I believe (HDs and HCs in 1999, HEs in 2001, and HVs and HZs in 2004, on another note). KZGs have also been around since 2001 along with MBZs (and yes, 2001 KZGs have bulged on the shelf without any use)... and that is impressive, but I believe there were some reports of HMs with bad datecodes lasting on this forum as well (HMs with a datecode of the 13th week of 2002 lasting several years of 24/7 use in the VRM output of a Siemens motherboard and HMs with a datecode of the 41st week of 2003 lasting 8 years of 24/7 use in a gigabit switch, although the ones in the gigabit switch did fail after that much use).
A little off topic too, but I recently recapped a Dell Optiplex GX620, that had 77,897 power on hourswith a Pentium 4 630. Dell used Rubycon MCZ on the VRM high side (1000uF 16V), linear regulator filtering (1800uF 6.3V) and all those 2200uF 6.3V caps by the chipset. They were all visibly fine, but I pulled them all to check them, and they were all within 5% spec. I was pretty impressed. One of the 2200uF caps read 2204uF. I was disappointed that all the little caps on the board were 85C (nichicon VR) but they were perfectly in spec as well. I polymodded it and it's now my HTPC.
I have some HM/HN/HZ caps from Topcat with 2013 date codes on them.
or bad because they test bad?Last edited by Wester547; 11-30-2014, 05:53 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
And shoot, Lubuntu is just barely too big for a CD, now I gotta find a DVD drive for the thing
You can try Puppy as well which is probably "ultralight". It would probably run on the "computers" they used to land men on the moon lol.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
You can try Puppy as well which is probably "ultralight". It would probably run on the "computers" they used to land men on the moon lol.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
Are they bad caps because of the brand and type or because they test bad? I'm not afraid to use reputed inferior caps if they test ok but I'm weird and a cheapskate. I figure they are like anything else, I use it till it doesn't work and then fix it if possible.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
If that board was in a SFF case, perhaps heat got to them if you have many hours on it. This is somewhat off topic so I'll keep my thoughts on the matter as terse as I can, and I might get a lot of flak for saying this, but... I know the "consensus" is that only 2001-2005 HMs/HNs are bad (people used to think 2005 capacitors were safe...).When did HM/HN start production? I've never seen any HM from 2006 fail, and I personally have a 945 board, 100% nichicon HM (Date codes early-mid 2006) for all the filtering, and they have survived over 35,000 hours of "torture" powering a Pentium 4 Prescott. It's actually still being used, except with a Pentium D now.
such as Sanyo WG/WF, Chemicon KZG/KZJ, Rubycon MBZ/MCZ, Panasonic FJ/FL, etc...with a Pentium 4 630. Dell used Rubycon MCZ on the VRM high side (1000uF 16V), linear regulator filtering (1800uF 6.3V) and all those 2200uF 6.3V caps by the chipset. They were all visibly fine, but I pulled them all to check them, and they were all within 5% spec. I was pretty impressed. One of the 2200uF caps read 2204uF. I was disappointed that all the little caps on the board were 85C (nichicon VR) but they were perfectly in spec as well. I polymodded it and it's now my HTPC.
I suppose it is no longer an issue because HM/HN/HZ were discontinued a couple years ago.
Nothing wrong with that. I love my old CRTs and pre-RoHS computers to this day.And that's awesome! I love CRT's.
Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
Awesome, thanks Steve. Gonna DL it right now. I wonder how it would run as it is. But, I really don't like running hardware with known bad caps.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
Originally posted by Pentium4The board is full of bad nichicon HM, date codes on them: 43rd week of 2001. I thought these were safe?
I honestly think an issue that results in so many millions of capacitors failing so prematurely is more complex than just "overfilling". Many things could have gone wrong. They could have been capacitors from an unauthorized, chinese distributor, they could fail for similar reasons that KZG/KZJ fail, etc... Nichicon made an announcement regarding the warning against use of certain disinfectants, but nothing was said about the HM or HN series there either. And again, people used to think capacitors up to 2005 were safe, but HNs still failed prematurely w/2005 date codes and sometimes even HMs w/2006 date codes. I don't know if Nichicon reformulated the electrolyte by the time the HZ series went into production as I haven't heard of or seen nearly as many failures since. As for Dell and HP announcing the problem would be fixed sometime in 2004? All that could mean is that they specified the use of capacitors other than HM/HNs in critical places (VCORE input and output), such as Sanyo WG/WF, Chemicon KZG/KZJ, Rubycon MBZ/MCZ, Panasonic FJ/FL, etc... and that announcement was only made for Optiplex GX270 machines. The quickest failures were also reported in SFF machines (as well as G4s/G5s) and on motherboards with hot running linear regulators, so perhaps heat did tip the bad HM/HNs over the edge quicker than not.
I am not trying to scare anyone into thinking that HM/HNs are unreliable now adays. If your HMs/HNs with recent datecodes are lasting, more power to you. But given how unreliable and sensitive to heat very low/ultra low ESR capacitors seem to be even from good manufacturers, I would keep a wary eye is all. I suppose it is no longer an issue because HM/HN/HZ were discontinued a couple years ago.
Don't ask me why but this PC is very special to me and I want to keep pit going.Last edited by Wester547; 11-30-2014, 05:04 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
Lubuntu is working quite well for me. It is specifically made for older PCs. I tried a few other lightweight distros but settled on Lubuntu for performance and GUI (LXDE). Finding support online is very good. It doesn't come with a boatload of apps installed but you can easily get and use what you like.
http://lubuntu.net/Leave a comment:
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Need light Linux OS for OLD computer
So, the sentimental side is getting the best of me hereI have a very old Dell Slim PC from 2001 that I want to keep going. Don't ask me why but this PC is very special to me and I want to keep it going. Specs are as follows:
Pentium 4 Willamette 1.5GHz
384MB PC133 RAM
Radeon X1050 256MB
Foxconn LS-36 motherboard
The board is full of bad nichicon HM, date codes on them: 43rd week of 2001. I thought these were safe? I will post pics later.
I am going to upgrade the RAM to 768MB or 1GB, because I have some at work, and I have a 200GB IDE drive with more cache that I will use to replace the 20GB drive. So besides some caps, I'm not spending any money on this thing, just time.
So basically, I'm looking for a very light Linux OS that I can use. All it will be doing really is streaming 480i/480p video through S-Video onto a 27" tube TV. Would much appreciate some input. I believe this is doable because it worked fine as it is with Windows XP, but I don't want to use Windows XP anymore.Tags: None
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