PornoSatan
2[H]4U
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- Sep 3, 2004
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I'm going to move my 'low' end laptop to a Linux distro and wanted to know by experienced users which would be the best option. It's a Inspiron 500m with a 1.3 ghz Pentium M (single core, 32 bit etc) and 1gb ram. I have used Linux before, but it was with Slackware back in the late 90s. During that time I became semi familiar with basic Linux concepts, command lines, scripts and so on. With that said though I have been out of the Linux loop for a long time. What distro would be right for me? I would consider myself a power user in Windows, with an obsession for cleanliness, speed, and responsiveness. I'm a big fan of Mark Russinovich and his Sysinternals tools that are small, elegant and powerful, like AutoRuns, Process Explorer, and Process Monitor. I like to keep records of what is going on and why, incidentally because of this I haven't had to reformat in quite a few years because my computer never becomes bloated, I keep track of things coming and going. I really don't like alot of things loading on boot unless I know specifically why. I want a Linux OS for my laptop that I could do similar with.
Here's how I, after reading around a bit, break them down (comments are welcome)
Ubuntu - This seems nice, its very popular and it has quite a bit of software pre-installed. And a nice software repository. Would the Unity DE work on this laptop? Not sure. I did read up on Kubuntu/Xubuntu/Lubuntu as other options and they seem interesting too. One thing I don't like is with all the stuff it has on it, it seems like it would be hard to keep track of what is actually going on ie "Why is process xxx with PID 193 running?" or why something is installed ie "Oh that's required for such and such to function"
Linux Mint - I like the desktop environment on this, seems like a traditional Windows-esque UI with Cinnamon. Although it comes with a TON of software pre-installed as well and I'm not sure whether or not i'd want potentially vulnerable apps or services already installed, like Java. I could probably uninstall them.
Arch Linux - This one seems crazy. On the one hand I love how 'fresh' of a Linux you can get with it, like if I installed KDE or something I know when I reboot I'll get dropped back in the command prompt because I didn't explicitly state that the KDE environment should run on boot. On the other hand I'm not sure if after I'm done installing it if I'll be able to properly get the wifi drivers installed as well as gpu acceleration etc just through the command line. I'm sure a bit of Googling would help though.
Puppy Linux - Seems kinda interesting.
Is there something that has the "barebones" of Arch, except comes with Wifi drivers, and has a software repository similar to Ubuntu? Essentially I want to boot into a blank OS that already has basic 'essentials' such as hardware drivers that allows me to decide on what software I want. I want to (re)learn the command line in order to truly progress with Linux and also be able to run a window manager or desktop environment if I want to in order to do general web browsing or other terminal related things. I'll probably be mostly in the GUI to be honest, since I can have terminals open anyways.
Almost all the distros look interesting.
What should I go with?
Here's how I, after reading around a bit, break them down (comments are welcome)
Ubuntu - This seems nice, its very popular and it has quite a bit of software pre-installed. And a nice software repository. Would the Unity DE work on this laptop? Not sure. I did read up on Kubuntu/Xubuntu/Lubuntu as other options and they seem interesting too. One thing I don't like is with all the stuff it has on it, it seems like it would be hard to keep track of what is actually going on ie "Why is process xxx with PID 193 running?" or why something is installed ie "Oh that's required for such and such to function"
Linux Mint - I like the desktop environment on this, seems like a traditional Windows-esque UI with Cinnamon. Although it comes with a TON of software pre-installed as well and I'm not sure whether or not i'd want potentially vulnerable apps or services already installed, like Java. I could probably uninstall them.
Arch Linux - This one seems crazy. On the one hand I love how 'fresh' of a Linux you can get with it, like if I installed KDE or something I know when I reboot I'll get dropped back in the command prompt because I didn't explicitly state that the KDE environment should run on boot. On the other hand I'm not sure if after I'm done installing it if I'll be able to properly get the wifi drivers installed as well as gpu acceleration etc just through the command line. I'm sure a bit of Googling would help though.
Puppy Linux - Seems kinda interesting.
Is there something that has the "barebones" of Arch, except comes with Wifi drivers, and has a software repository similar to Ubuntu? Essentially I want to boot into a blank OS that already has basic 'essentials' such as hardware drivers that allows me to decide on what software I want. I want to (re)learn the command line in order to truly progress with Linux and also be able to run a window manager or desktop environment if I want to in order to do general web browsing or other terminal related things. I'll probably be mostly in the GUI to be honest, since I can have terminals open anyways.
Almost all the distros look interesting.
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