Good Linux distribution for older Intel Core Duo?

Discussion in 'all things UNIX' started by SAustn2, Nov 11, 2019.

  1. SAustn2

    SAustn2 Registered Member

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    I installed Ubuntu 12.04 LTS x64 for my sister since Windows XP went out of support. Anyway I showed her MX Linux and Kubuntu on my 2nd pc recently and she liked them so I replaced her Ubuntu with Kubuntu and now her machine seems a little slower.

    My question is, is Kubuntu too heavy for an older Core Duo computer and would she be better off with MX Linux? Any advice appreciated, thanks. This machine only has on-board graphics.
     
  2. mirimir

    mirimir Registered Member

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    Xubuntu is probably the lightest Ubuntu variant.

    Even lighter is starting with Debian or Ubuntu server, and installing the openbox desktop. But that's Spartan. And you'll need to install each GUI app that you want.
     
  3. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

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    I have a 10 year old Asus Core 2 Duo with onboard Intel graphics and Kubuntu 18.04.x runs fine on it. I have also used Debian 10.1 KDE without problems as well as Manjaro KDE. Just as snappy and quick as anything else...
     
  4. zapjb

    zapjb Registered Member

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  5. SAustn2

    SAustn2 Registered Member

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    mirimir: "Xubuntu is probably the lightest Ubuntu variant.

    Even lighter is starting with Debian or Ubuntu server, and installing the openbox desktop. But that's Spartan. And you'll need to install each GUI app that you want."

    Would openbox be hard to install for someone with no experience with it and do you mean I also have to install openbox for each GUI app or just install the apps separately?


    Kerodo: "I have a 10 year old Asus Core 2 Duo with onboard Intel graphics and Kubuntu 18.04.x runs fine on it. I have also used Debian 10.1 KDE without problems as well as Manjaro KDE. Just as snappy and quick as anything else..."

    I didn't get much time to try it after install so I'll go back to her house and see how it's doing, could a slow internet make it feel slow, she only has 1.5mbs download?


    zapjb: "Might I suggest: https://distrowatch.com/search.php
    Distribution category - Old Computers"


    Thanks for the helpfull link zapjb and thank you all for the advice :).
     
  6. mirimir

    mirimir Registered Member

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    No, just the openbox desktop, and then the apps.

    See https://prahladyeri.com/blog/2016/02/minimal-debian-desktop-setup.html

    And actually, I forgot LXDE, which uses openbox: https://lxde.org/

    Also, BunsenLabs Helium: https://www.bunsenlabs.org/

    It's very old school: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VW3OMrqg4Wg
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Nov 11, 2019
  7. fblais

    fblais Registered Member

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    LXDE is not a distro, it's a DE.
    They give a link to Lubuntu, but Lubuntu has switched to LXQT now.

    XFCE is probably the best light DE these days, and about every distro has a version.
    I suggest Linux Mint with XFCE desktop.
     
  8. Mrkvonic

    Mrkvonic Linux Systems Expert

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    MX Linux. Works fine on a 10-year-old eeePC.
    Mrk
     
  9. deBoetie

    deBoetie Registered Member

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    Another thumbs up for MX, very impressed with the choices they've made, intelligent and useful.

    The pendrive/persistent options (which also tend to be useful for older hardware) are sensational, it's kind of superseded Puppy Linux completely.
     
  10. FastGame

    FastGame Registered Member

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    MX Linux runs nice on my old Dell D630, my low powered ThinkPad X140e handles MX Linux just as well.
     
  11. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

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    Yep, agreed. I am loving MX-19 right now on my old Asus core 2 duo.
     
  12. zapjb

    zapjb Registered Member

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    What is MXLinux EOL, or is it rolling or something else? Thanks.
     
  13. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

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    They put out a new one every year near the latter part of the year. MX-19 was just released a few weeks ago. I just looked at their site and apparently there is no way to upgrade from 18 to 19, they say a clean install is needed to get to the latest. I'm not sure how long they support each year's release though. I usually do clean installs on everything anyhow, so I don't mind.
     
  14. wat0114

    wat0114 Registered Member

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    I'm running it on my i5-7200U, and it's every bit as impressive as MX-18 was.
     
  15. Brian K

    Brian K Imaging Specialist

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    Does MX-19 support UEFI Secure Boot? Ver 18.1 didn't.
     
  16. Kerodo

    Kerodo Registered Member

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    Yes indeed! :)
     
  17. deBoetie

    deBoetie Registered Member

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    There's a fair bit on information on the forums about the choices and procedures. In any case, like you find, a clean install is quite therapeutic and data continuity is hardly difficult. I'd much rather they focussed attention on more important aspects than hand-holding migration, though I guess if they get more popular yet, that might be something worthwhile for the inexperienced.
     
  18. wat0114

    wat0114 Registered Member

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    According to the MX-19 .pdf user manual, it does support UEFI only with 64 bit hardware, and it recommends disabling safe boot. I have safe boot disabled on my hardware.

    Agreed,this is a phenomenal feature in MX.

    BTW, I had a highly favorable experience with Linux Lite a few years ago. Fast and stable on older hardware, although I don't know what it's like nowadays. It gets positive reviews.
     
    Last edited: Nov 13, 2019
  19. Brian K

    Brian K Imaging Specialist

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    Well, that was a challenge. The UFD boots with Secure Boot enabled but installed MX-19 doesn't boot with Secure Boot enabled.

    I thought MX-19 was based on Debian 10 which does boot with Secure Boot enabled.
     
  20. wat0114

    wat0114 Registered Member

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    It is like so many other distros, but unfortunately there are very few that support secure boot.

    BTW, for you and the OP, and anyone else, for that matter, MX-18/19 can make for a fantastic boot pendrive. The persistence feature works flawlessly for either or both of the root and home partitons and it's easy to set up.
     
  21. Brian K

    Brian K Imaging Specialist

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    These support Secure Boot and are running in my UEFI computer...

    Mint (Cinnamon, XFCE, Mate)
    Ubuntu
    Ubuntu Mate
    Kubuntu
    Xubuntu
    Lubuntu
    OpenSuseKDE
    Fedora
    Centos
    Debian

    Distros not supporting Secure Boot have been installed in my MBR computer.
     
  22. fblais

    fblais Registered Member

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  23. dogbite

    dogbite Registered Member

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    Another vote for MX19, great distro and very light. If not light enough, try AntiX.
     
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