Notices

Overclockers Forums > Software > Alternative Operating Systems
Alternative Operating Systems Linux, Mac, Unix Operating Systems and Applications
Forum Jump

Will this system work?

Post Reply New Thread Subscribe Search this Thread
 
 
Thread Tools
Old 11-15-01, 02:50 PM Thread Starter   #1
Wyno
Member



Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Durand MI

10 Year Badge
 
Will this system work?


I found a used system at a local computer store and it has a p 166 and 48 megs of ram and a 2 gig hard drive. I was just wondering if this would work to install linux and get used to it before I put it on my main system. Just wondering if it would run ok.
Wyno is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-15-01, 03:45 PM   #2
PolyPill
Senior Member

 
PolyPill's Avatar 

Join Date: May 2001
Location: Minnesota

 
Anything 386 and up will work with linux, it just depends how long you want to wait for things.

I think Mandrake is compiled for 586 class computers.

If this if your first Linux experience don't expect much from a slower machine. So many people put linux on a slow machine then get mad at how slow it is even though it's faster than if you were to put windows on the same box.

I would say the min requirements for linux with a gui would be about what you've got there. You really only need a 500mb hd, but 2 gigs should be enough. If the video card is under 2mb you wont be very happy.

__________________
"Give me a chance to shine and I'll blind the world" - Transplants

GNU/Linux Debian Sid
Dell Latitude c640
2ghz 512mb DDR
PolyPill is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-15-01, 05:29 PM Thread Starter   #3
Wyno
Member



Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Durand MI

10 Year Badge
 
I'm not sure whqt video card it has but the store has a 4 meg card for 5 bucks so its not a big deal. I just want another computer to learn on and one for the kid so she can play her games on her own machine and I figure for $99 bucks its a good deal
Wyno is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-16-01, 08:27 AM   #4
PolyPill
Senior Member

 
PolyPill's Avatar 

Join Date: May 2001
Location: Minnesota

 
Do what you want.

You'll always see an increase in proformance and happiness with the more powerful your system is. Once ou get past the min requirements the rest is just how much money do you want to spend and what you're going to use this for.

For learning, browsing the web, and using it as a small http/ftp server this machine is fine, I wouldn't want to work on it on a daily basis.

__________________
"Give me a chance to shine and I'll blind the world" - Transplants

GNU/Linux Debian Sid
Dell Latitude c640
2ghz 512mb DDR
PolyPill is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-17-01, 08:09 AM   #5
David
Forums Super Moderator
Overclockers.com Lead Editor



 
David's Avatar 

Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Hiding from Americans and making pretty colours in a drybox in St Andrews

10 Year Badge
 
You may need a slightly older version of linux for that box. I have turbolinux 6 running on a p120/16MB and it is painfully slow. (see the 'Can YOU help?' thread in General discussion).

__________________
David J. Nelson MChem(Edin) PhD(Strath) AMRSC [Academia Profile]
OC Forums Super Moderator // Overclockers.com Editor


The Workhorse: [Lenovo W510] Intel Core i7-720QM / 8 GB DDR3 / nVidia Quadro FX880M / Crucial M4 256 GB SSD / Windows 7
The HTPC/Server: AMD Phenom X4 9650 / 6 GB DDR2 / nVidia 8300 / 5 TB of HDDs / Antec Solo II Case / Windows 7
The Gaming Rig: AMD Llano A6-3650 / 4 GB DDR3 / nVidia GTX260 / 2x 500 GB HDD in RAID0 / Antec Dark Fleet DF-85 Case / Windows 7
The Benchmarking Setup: Various LGA775 chips / Asus Rampage Formula / 2 GB OCZ 1066 MHz DDR2 / nVidia Quadro NVS 285 / 320 GB HDD / Windows 7

My research fellowship is eating all my time, so I may be slow to reply to emails and private messages.
David is offline Author Profile Benching Profile Folding Profile   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-17-01, 11:19 AM   #6
PolyPill
Senior Member

 
PolyPill's Avatar 

Join Date: May 2001
Location: Minnesota

 
Quote:
Originally posted by penguinfreak
You may need a slightly older version of linux for that box. I have turbolinux 6 running on a p120/16MB and it is painfully slow. (see the 'Can YOU help?' thread in General discussion).
Why would you need an older version? The only thing that makes the newer versions run slower on older machines is because by default more crap is installed. If you were to install the same amount of services it runs just as good, if not better than an older version.

__________________
"Give me a chance to shine and I'll blind the world" - Transplants

GNU/Linux Debian Sid
Dell Latitude c640
2ghz 512mb DDR
PolyPill is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-17-01, 01:20 PM   #7
David
Forums Super Moderator
Overclockers.com Lead Editor



 
David's Avatar 

Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Hiding from Americans and making pretty colours in a drybox in St Andrews

10 Year Badge
 
I'm thinking more about X and the fact that yes, more crap is installed. If you pick up an old cheap distro, you don't have to spend £30-£100 and not use half the software. With old PCs you wnat a usable GUI, you don't need to worry about font AA or if you have XFRee 4.1 or whatever.

__________________
David J. Nelson MChem(Edin) PhD(Strath) AMRSC [Academia Profile]
OC Forums Super Moderator // Overclockers.com Editor


The Workhorse: [Lenovo W510] Intel Core i7-720QM / 8 GB DDR3 / nVidia Quadro FX880M / Crucial M4 256 GB SSD / Windows 7
The HTPC/Server: AMD Phenom X4 9650 / 6 GB DDR2 / nVidia 8300 / 5 TB of HDDs / Antec Solo II Case / Windows 7
The Gaming Rig: AMD Llano A6-3650 / 4 GB DDR3 / nVidia GTX260 / 2x 500 GB HDD in RAID0 / Antec Dark Fleet DF-85 Case / Windows 7
The Benchmarking Setup: Various LGA775 chips / Asus Rampage Formula / 2 GB OCZ 1066 MHz DDR2 / nVidia Quadro NVS 285 / 320 GB HDD / Windows 7

My research fellowship is eating all my time, so I may be slow to reply to emails and private messages.
David is offline Author Profile Benching Profile Folding Profile   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-17-01, 05:15 PM Thread Starter   #8
Wyno
Member



Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Durand MI

10 Year Badge
 
You guys confuse me with things like Distro and gui and the such. I guess I just need to install it and see what you all are talking about.
Wyno is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-18-01, 11:30 PM   #9
XWRed1
Senior Member

 
XWRed1's Avatar 

Join Date: Oct 2001

 
Newer versions of XFree86 aren't any slower than the older ones. They may even be faster.

Its "Microsoft-thinking" to think that newer versions will always be slower.
XWRed1 is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-19-01, 05:42 AM   #10
WesMarden
Registered



Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Harrison, AR

 
I first had redhat 5.x running on a regular P166 with 24 MB ram. I had it going on a 500 meg partion, so I think you should be able to get it to run on your machine.

I was running Mandrake 7.0-2(can't remember for sure) on the same machine about 2 years ago. It was slow with gui(Graphical User Interface), but it served as my desktop machine. I think part of that problem with the GUI was it only had 1-2 megs of video memory.

So I think yes you can run Linux fairly well. I am more of a redhat fan for your system from my experience, though Mandrake does have a simple install. The next system I build will probably have mandrake as its OS. But I have current versions of both redhat & mandrake.
WesMarden is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-19-01, 08:39 AM   #11
PolyPill
Senior Member

 
PolyPill's Avatar 

Join Date: May 2001
Location: Minnesota

 
Quote:
Originally posted by Wyno
You guys confuse me with things like Distro and gui and the such. I guess I just need to install it and see what you all are talking about.
Distro= Distribution = something like Redhat, or Mandrake. They're both linux just versions put out by other companies.

GUI = Graphic User Interface. Your desktop with the mouse, like KDE or Gnome.

Also, penguinfreak mentioned something about paying. You're not forced to pay for linux, you can download it for free and make a cd. When you pay what you're getting is a nice box, some manuals, and help with the installation.

I'm all for supporting companies like Redhat, but I feel I've bought my share of their boxed products and I don't need thier manuals and extra help.

If you buy boxed they have a very nice manual which, if used properly, will help a newbie a lot. If money is an issue, just post your questions here, there are many people on this board capable of helping.

__________________
"Give me a chance to shine and I'll blind the world" - Transplants

GNU/Linux Debian Sid
Dell Latitude c640
2ghz 512mb DDR
PolyPill is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-19-01, 01:33 PM   #12
chaim79
Registered



Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: S/W Wisconsin

 
low cost linux CD's


If you don't look forward to downloading a CD image (56k line maybe?) just head over to www.cheapbytes.com They sell cd's of linux for cheep, often just the cost of the cd, burning time, and shipping.

That's where I went for my first try at linux.

I would suggest getting something allong the lines of Redhat 6.2 I've heard that anything earlier has security problems and I have redhat 7.1 and that installs way to much. But you do have your choice, even redhat 7.2 (the latest version) can install and run on the specs you listed. Since I ran it on a p133 64mb ram and 1gb hd. I know it'll work.

It kinda sounds like you are new to linux, I would suggest going to www.linuxdoc.org and keeping it handy, they have many "howto" documents that can help you figure out what is what and where to go. Also I would suggest getting a book for linux, I started with "linux for dummies" and it was very helpfull for me to figure out what was going on.

At any rate. If you run into problems feel free to post a question or two, or ten. There are many Linux pro's here who would be glad to help.
chaim79 is offline   QUOTE Thanks
Old 11-19-01, 03:29 PM Thread Starter   #13
Wyno
Member



Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Durand MI

10 Year Badge
 
Thanks all for the help. I will be getting layed off shorlty and looking forward to spending some time with Linux. I'm sure I'll be back with questions.
Wyno is offline   QUOTE Thanks

Post Reply New Thread Subscribe


Overclockers Forums > Software > Alternative Operating Systems
Alternative Operating Systems Linux, Mac, Unix Operating Systems and Applications
Forum Jump

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search


Mobile Skin
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:43 AM.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
You can add these icons by updating your profile information to include your Heatware ID, Benching Profile ID or your Folding/SETI profile ID. Edit your profile!
X

Welcome to Overclockers.com

Create your username to jump into the discussion!

New members like you have made this the best community on the Internet since 1998!


(4 digit year)

Why Join Us?

  • Share experience
  • Max out your hardware
  • Best forum members anywhere
  • Customized forum experience

Already a member?