noclobber
Group: Members
Posts: 75
Joined: Sep. 2004 |
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Posted: Feb. 09 2005,18:56 |
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I recently worked on a Compaq Presario 633 with a 486SX/33MHz CPU, 24MB RAM, and 210MB HD. A year ago I installed Windows 95 OSR2 on it in a compressed FAT16 partition. It was awfully sluggish, though, and it was too easy for the kids to screw up.
Thought I'd try DSL. I took skaos' custom recompiled no-math-coprocesor-required kernel and remastered it into DSL 0.7.3, the last DSL version which used that kernel (all DSL versions after 0.6.x require a math coprocessor). Since the Compaq couldn't boot from CD, the HD was transplanted into a newer PC long enough to install my DSL "0.7.3 SX".
In the Compaq, DSL booted up fine except for X, apparently because the mobo's built-in video was not VESA-compliant, but after installing an old version of XFree86, I got X working as well. It ran, but was awfully slow.
I tried out some other lightweight versions of Linux with GUI - which you might want to check out - like Grey Cat Linux, Feather Linux, and MiniLin, but again had too many problems with X on my funky video.
I ended up installing Windows NT 3.51 Workstation with NewShell 2 (gives it that Win95 look) in an NTFS partition with the Opera 5.12 web browser, nPOP email client, tons of Windows 3.1 games, and today it's reasonably snappy and works great.
-------------- Don't say "No" to Digital Restrictions Management, say "HELL, NO!!!".
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