UBuntu on older machines ?

Charley Ramm charleyramm at gmail.com
Fri Dec 10 17:18:06 UTC 2004


I run a pII, 266mhz with debian on it. Currently it is my main machine 
until my laptop gets fixed. It runs fluxbox and dillo perfectly smoothly 
and it also runs an apache server with perl / python cgi so i can play 
with that stuff. It is a great little box. *Aside from that, its fitted 
in to an old cardboard box. Old school, huh? But i love it.
 My onboard sound is also broken, but with fluxbox and dillo i have a 
perfectly smooth and useable operating system. Firefox is sluggish, but 
works ok for those pages that need it. (I hate CSS with a passion now).
 Im sure i heard that ubuntu can install xfce as an alternative to 
gnome. Have you tried this yet? Or any of the other 'light' window 
managers.
I got a shock last night when i tried The Gimp on this little machine. 
It ran FINE! It was absolutely brilliant. I am never buying a new 
computer, ever again. (crosses his fingers)

Charley

Vincent Trouilliez wrote:

>>>Now that I have just learned that Ubuntu can run on my old Pentium
>>>200MMX board with 256MB of RAM, I can't wait to try.
>>>
>>>Vince
>>>      
>>>
>
>  
>
>>Don't hesitate, just try it - my organisation has 3 pre-233MHz machines
>>with linux installed. Just try it then post again.
>>    
>>
>
>
>Okay here is the result with Intel 200MMX board.
>
>First, my board was more clever that I thought, the BIOS did manage to
>boot from the CD ! :-)
>
>I put 256MB of RAM on the board, and re-used the original hard drive,
>ATA33  3.2GB disk, as I wasn't sure if my bigger disks would work, I
>seem to remember there was a size limitation problem with disks around
>that time, but I couldn't remember exactly what was the problem. So I
>played it safe and just re-used the original drive.
>
>The install took well wellll over an hour, probably because of the disk
>that's kinda slow, as Jeff pointed out.
>
>Despite copying all the packages, Ubuntu used only 1.5GB of space,
>therefore leaving me with another 1.5GB to play with.
>
>Apart from the on-board sound which didn't work, and Gnome forcing me to
>use a 800*600 screen resolution instead of the 1024*768 I used to use on
>this machine, everything worked perfectly. Laser printer, external ZIP
>drive, Ethernet controller and cable modem/internet, everything was
>working fine out of the box.
>
>However it was a bit too slow to be useable, calling a Nautilus window
>(say the 'disk' location or 'home' or whatever) took 5 seconds, so it's
>not really suitable for daily use.
>
>I am sure if the CPU was only a bit faster, it would work well. But
>sadly, 200MHz is already the fastest Pentium one you can get, ISTR.
>233MHz maybe. I am sure a dual 200MMX board would be plenty powerfull
>enough
>
>However I have recently been toying with the idea of having a second
>Linux box to build a local Ethernet network, both to serve some specific
>needs I have, but also generally to play with things, experiment with
>Network related things, and learn more about Linux.
>
>Typically that's what I would like to achieve/experiment with this
>future machine:
>
>1) Put several IDE disks and binds them using S/W RAID
>2) Set up an NFS network with the main/other machine
>3) Use it to regularly back-up my 10GB or so of precious data from the
>main PC
>4) Attach laser printer locally and let the main PC access it from the
>network
>5) fiddle with remote administration, remote control of the PC using
>Gnome's 2.8 new tools.
>6) local mail
>7) Intranet / local web server
>8) Other things that will eventually spring to mind as I go ! ;-)
>
>But I need first to buy a decent tower case, screen and keyboard and
>mouse hardrive power supply etc, and money is very tight right now.
>But eventually this will come to life sometime next year, at which point
>I will no doubt bombard this list for help. Be prepared folks... ;o)
>
>
>Regards,
>
>Vince
>
>
>
>  
>





More information about the ubuntu-users mailing list