If I should do something else or if you have an answer or idea. Please speak up! Thanks!

Small Linux
Started by
Luckey
, Aug 25 2005 10:17 AM
#1
Posted 25 August 2005 - 10:17 AM

If I should do something else or if you have an answer or idea. Please speak up! Thanks!
#2
Posted 25 August 2005 - 05:42 PM

I've tried Mandrake and Suse and they were both large and slow. I've heard that Fedora Core 4 and some versions of Slackware are lighter and faster. One of my next projects will be to try them. I think one reason Linux is slow is because they don't seem to use much or any kind of registry, when contains many shortcuts in memory to the system files in Windows.
#3
Posted 26 August 2005 - 12:09 AM

I think one reason Linux is slow is because they don't seem to use much or any kind of registry, when contains many shortcuts in memory to the system files in Windows.
I disagree. That depends on the distro you used, and how many services are running. If you're running a fast, light, and highly configurable distro like gentoo or slackware, then it really depends on how well you configure it. Although you're right the about the registry, linux is as slow as you make it.
Yep. Mandrake, SuSe, redhat, and fedora core are all big and slow. I suggest going with something like gentoo or slackware (As mentioned above). Of course, it might be difficult to learn on either of the two if you have no prior experience.I've tried Mandrake and Suse and they were both large and slow.
And if the resources are absolutly terrible, go with |)amn Small Linux.
Good luck!
#4
Posted 26 August 2005 - 05:47 PM

one of the things to take into consideration is how big the hdd is. if its a fairly new computer with like a 10 or 20 gig hdd, you can go wiht just about any distro.
if you only have a 5 or 10 gig hdd, then you want a light one. I use Ubuntu, has a small footprint, and completely configured as I do it only takes up about 1.5 gig of hdd space. and the support is fairly decent, you can get live support on IRC and they have free forum support too.
if you only have a 5 or 10 gig hdd, then you want a light one. I use Ubuntu, has a small footprint, and completely configured as I do it only takes up about 1.5 gig of hdd space. and the support is fairly decent, you can get live support on IRC and they have free forum support too.
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