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I have an old Portege 610 CT laptop that I decided to ressurect.
It's specs are something like...
90mhz
40 megs of ram
800 meg harddrive
I'm acquiring an old Toshiba floppy drive so I can actually do something with it. My question is, what distro would you suggest for such a machine?
The laptop will probably never be connected to the internet (which is why I'm thinking Arch might not be the best idea), and it'll have to be something I can install entirely from floppies (not looking forward to that :? ). Mostly I just want vi, gcc, and nethack on there; I'm not planning on trying to run X or anything.
Any suggestions or general tips are much appreciated!
Edit: Is an all floppy install even really feasible?
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Heres a list of linux distros that install from a floppy.
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~thelinuxguy/ … x/all.html
The other option is to install an old distro like debian 2.0 which can be installed from muiltiple floppys.
Have fun.
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aaahhhh, lucky
That powerful machine is starting to make my Thinkpad 701c (75mhz, 16mb RAM, 540mb HDD) look a bit old
I run slack 7.2 on it... took a long time to get it working (and alot of floppies!), but it's pretty damn fast.
I wonder if i can get some MAME going...
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I wonder if i can get some MAME going...
Probably not, but please do tell if you can
KISS = "It can scarcely be denied that the supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience." - Albert Einstein
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btw, about the question. I would have to recommend puppylinux for all the good things i have heard about it. I know it's X but i think it will run fast regardless if what i hear is true
also this might be of use:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Li … r_machines
KISS = "It can scarcely be denied that the supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience." - Albert Einstein
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One other thought with a machine that old is to run some other super-lightweight OS. I remember reading an article about one called MenuetOS and I downloaded it. The thing runs off of a single floppy. I could boot my PC up with it and do a few things but never did much other than that one session to test it out.
Here's their website if you want to have a look:
http://www.menuetos.net/
I know there are others like that too. I guess my point is that if you're looking for a lightweight OS to run on a very old system from floppies there are other options besides linux to consider. I'm not sure if any of those would meet your needs but they might be worth looking at before deciding what you'll use.
And here's a site with a whole bunch of OS choices listed, some linux, some not.
http://www.freebyte.com/operatingsystems/
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DSL.....
my2cents
Mr Green
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Right now it's running BasicLinux. I was going to try out AlfaLinux, but all the documentation was in Italian (which I don't speak). I haven't attempted to install the other packages I need yet, so I'm not sure whether or not I'll stick with it (it's likely I'll try to switch to an older version of Slackware).
If I end up wanting X, I'll probably install DSL or Puppy.
Thanks for the suggestions everyone.
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DSL .... you do not have to have X installed....puppy not so sure about that one
Mr Green
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Vector?
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Nothing better than Slackware for that machine, imho.
Btw, what about looking on the BSD side of the force ?
(OpenBSD or NetBSD in particular)
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