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TheKid7
August 8th, 2011, 09:48 AM
What would be some good choices for a "Best" Linux Live Distro for a "Newbie"? The person has an ~8 year old Dell which "may" have a hard drive failing. He just wants to surf the web and maybe sometimes print something. He needs a Distro with the firewall already setup (He has no Cable/DSL Router. He only has a direct connection to the modem.).

Thanks in Advance.

FastGame
August 8th, 2011, 06:37 PM
"The person has an ~8 year old Dell which "may" have a hard drive failing."

Hmmm best chance for old hardware would be something like Puppy Linux, doesn't need a hard drive but would need something like a thumb drive to save changes...(maybe the failing HD could last long enough for that ? )

Puppy Linux is a fast LiveCD that loads into memory, its easy for "Newbie" and the firewall is easy to setup.

TheKid7
August 8th, 2011, 10:44 PM
I plan to give him the following:

1. Puppy Linux 5.25
2, Ubuntu 11.04
3. Pardus 2011.1 Live CD
4. Parted Magic 6.4 (Only to run hard drive diagnostics.)

About a year ago, he briefly used GParted in an older version of Puppy Linux to make his Windows XP C: partition "Active". He was using a different partition manager to resize his C: partition so that he could make a data partition and somehow he changed the newly created data partition to "Active" making Windows XP not boot.

mack_guy911
August 9th, 2011, 04:37 AM
if core 2 duo or dual core with 1gb or + ram then LINUX MINT would be best choice

if its p4 .............etc you can go with xubuntu mint xfce or puppy linux

firewall gui is already there just need to click and enable :)

pclinuxos would be my second choice

TheKid7
August 9th, 2011, 11:03 AM
I also gave him LinuxMint xfce & Xubuntu

adam993
August 14th, 2011, 11:47 AM
PCLinuxOS with LXDE?

farmerlee
August 14th, 2011, 09:17 PM
You could try Slitaz. It's the fastest booting livecd I've used and works amazingly well on my 10 year old IBM thinkpad. Puppy also works very well, it doesn't boot as fast as Slitaz but seems to have more features.

kerykeion
August 14th, 2011, 09:25 PM
Definitely Linux Mint 10 LXDE

Hungry Man
August 14th, 2011, 09:26 PM
Gentoo.

vasa1
August 14th, 2011, 09:43 PM
-{ Quote: "Gentoo." }-

Very funny :D

From OP:
-{ Quote: "What would be some good choices for a "Best" Linux Live Distro for a "Newbie"? The person has an ~8 year old Dell which "may" have a hard drive failing. He just wants to surf the web and maybe sometimes print something." }-

Hungry Man
August 14th, 2011, 09:44 PM
Best way to learn! =p

wat0114
August 15th, 2011, 12:03 AM
For an 8 yr old pc, Puppy by a long shot :) As I've said before, "it's the dog's bollocks" ;D

Seriously, it's an awesome distro for old hardware.

vasa1
August 15th, 2011, 12:46 AM
-{ Quote: "Best way to learn! =p" }-

Do you have practical experience with Gentoo?

Searching_ _ _
August 15th, 2011, 02:46 AM
I put Lubuntu on someones old Dell P4 with 512 MB of RAM, went pretty good. Some slight differences from Ubuntu but nothing major. Once basic system was setup happiness developed and the system ran smooth with Gnome.
I was not a fan of Ubuntu in the past but I like the PPA system for updating and installing, simplifying the process for us beginners.

I suggest Lubuntu, any flavor you want.

mack_guy911
August 15th, 2011, 04:40 AM
lxde xfce are pretty good on old hardware

linux mint lxde and xfce is pretty out of box with lof of stuff preinstalled


also there is paper mint OS its good distro created by same guy who make mint lxde

puppy is also great choice for old hardware and ease of use

Beavenburt
August 15th, 2011, 02:13 PM
debian stable. It's the lightest around and that thing aint gonna break. It does take a bit of effort to get it up and running with multimedia though. Or try a debian stable based distro with multimedia codecs, flash etc already installed or easily installable. Mepis perhaps?

JConLine
August 15th, 2011, 03:25 PM
I installed Vector LInux to an old Lenovo laptop with 256MB of RAM. The problem with this computer was the processor, I think it was an AMD K2, but it was not compatible with most of the LInux kernals and would not install.

Puppy version 4.3.1 installed easily with WPA2 wireless and I almost used it but Vector had more features and the wireless setup was graphical with WPA2.

The latest version of Puppy would not install because of the processor issue but Vector's latest version of their Light Live Edition installed and works without any problems. Also, which was important to me, Vector gave a choice of the latest Browsers and the amount of RAM each used.

JIm

chrisretusn
August 16th, 2011, 05:39 AM
Slackware... ;)

Actually I'd give PCLinuxOS the nod.

zapjb
August 16th, 2011, 06:53 AM
I'd say Puppy. Buy a $5 1GB jump drive & they're set.
Failing HDD. We don't need no stinkin' HDD.

TheKid7
August 16th, 2011, 02:15 PM
Zorin OS looks promising. Has anyone installed and used Zorin OS? I briefly tried it out as a LiveCD.

Thanks in Advance.

cobrafirefly
August 18th, 2011, 04:08 PM
Gentoo got teh lolz

x942
August 19th, 2011, 02:52 AM
-{ Quote: "Best way to learn! =p" }-

If you want to learn debian install debian, if you want to learn red hat install red hat, if you want to learn linux install slackware. :D

Although slackware is considerably easy compared to gentoo (you essentially compile it from scratch). Best part is it works flawless with you hardware once you do it!

TheKid7
August 22nd, 2011, 08:47 PM
How Newbie friendly and stable is CentOS?

mack_guy911
August 23rd, 2011, 02:19 PM
centOS or SL are very stable for day to day desktop use i dont use eyecandy stuff much on my main desktop so it work perfectly well for me


http://www.wilderssecurity.com/showthread.php?t=294257

http://www.wilderssecurity.com/showthread.php?t=305517

http://www.wilderssecurity.com/showthread.php?t=304355


please check above ones worth checking and subforms