I know Debian and others can breathe life into older machines. But i wonder if there are any distros with serious optimizations that I haven't heard of. I've already tried MX Linux on an old Thinkpad SL400, and didn't see any difference from plain Debian.

Update: thanks for the great suggestions. Forgot to say many distros feel zippy and fast until you open a web browser. Appreciate your thoughts on which web browser to use too. So far I've had a positive experience with Thorium and Chromium.

  • llothar@lemmy.ml
    ·
    8 months ago

    The problem with older machines is the web browsing, not the system itself. You could use a browser with Java script disabled but a lot of websites will refuse to work.

    You have to sacrifice with browser functionality to improve performance.

  • ipsirc@lemmy.ml
    ·
    8 months ago

    Try: https://github.com/marmolak/gray386linux <-- It was designed for really old hardwares.

    I’ve already tried MX Linux on an old Thinkpad SL400, and didn’t see any difference from plain Debian.

    Because it's the stock Debian + custom themes/skins + some crappy useless minitools. The 99% of packages come from the official Debian repository, the rest are only the rice.

    If you have newer machine than a real 386:

    • https://kisslinux.org/
    • https://github.com/oasislinux/oasis
    • https://www.glaucuslinux.org/
    • https://www.alpinelinux.org/
    • https://voidlinux.org/
  • 0x0@programming.dev
    ·
    8 months ago

    So Slackware? If you can cross-compile then maybe gentoo. I'm not sure if Raspberry Pi Desktop is x86.

  • khorovodoved@lemm.ee
    ·
    edit-2
    8 months ago

    If you want serious optimizations - then Gentoo is your choice. But seriously, there won't be any serious difference between distributions. What really matters here are DEs and browsers. I would recommend some kind of lightweight window manager like i3 or dwm. If you do not want to configure everything yourself, then your choice is lxde/lxqt. Also, you can use distros without systemd (void, artix, devuan, gentoo etc), but that does not matter that much.