Ew, R*ddit
Linux
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
Rules
- Posts must be relevant to operating systems running the Linux kernel. GNU/Linux or otherwise.
- No misinformation
- No NSFW content
- No hate speech, bigotry, etc
Related Communities
Community icon by Alpár-Etele Méder, licensed under CC BY 3.0
Forgive me father, for I have sinned 🛐
It's even funnier because the title uses the word "useful" and then shows a screenshot including reddit -- lol
Gee, I'm sorry alright? Just wanted to show off Tor browser, old.reddit.com was the first thing that came to mind that I'd use with Tor 😅
No worries, really, just made me smirk on seeing lol
Nothing screams "Workstation" louder than Reddit Mobile.
Poor choice of word eh? 😅
Reddit spotted. 2.5/10 setup.
For your last question, there's the Lemmy terminal viewer — I think it's unmaintained, but it's a start?
I'm still surprised there are 32 bit apps out there that are supported still. It's good to know there are people who are working to prevent e-waste.
Also that links2 thing is quite interesting.
Also that links2 thing is quite interesting.
It's a CLI program that can browse websites (only reads HTML). It can even display images, download files, etc... A lightweight and fast little webpage loader, I love it :)
There's quite a few. I have bunsenlabs helium installed on a 32 bit pentium M laptop. It's very usable, for a 20 yo single core machine. For basic things, it's still fine. I do have some gpu acceleration though which is a benefit.
The old.lemmy.world frontend (also old... on other instances) works in links2.
There's currently no other way to browse Lemmy in a text browser on a TTY that actually works, I've tried them all recently (including browsh, carbonyl, neonmodem).
With the amount of Linux nerds on Lemmy, I'm shocked there's an a TUI client for it.
Maybe I'll have to make one someday.
I also have an old shitty computer from Acer with 4gb of RAM lying around.
I feel a bit guilty about not using it, but I’m already sharing my time between my Surface Go 1 (daily driver) and my girlfriend’s 2012 MacBook Pro, so I wouldn’t know what to do with it.
If anyone has an idea, I’m listening 👂
If it can play video at a reasonable quality, hook it up to a TV, fill it with torrented movies you want to watch and you'll have your own home entertainment system.
That's one idea. If it can't play high quality videos there are still a lot more uses for it.
Remote backup server would be my suggestion.
Configure it with a VPN to talk to your home network and set it up at a trusted friend's or family's place.
I do this with a raspberry pi and an external HDD that takes daily/weekly/monthly snapshots, with daily rsync. Works nicely for me.
Backup server?
Debian is good for this. Enjoy it while there is still 32-bit support though. Edit- do you have any swap configured?
1 extra gig of swap was configured by Debian automatically on install. Should I add more?
Id make it 2 or 3 gb. That being said, 1 gb is fine for such a light install. I have a similarly specced pentium M machine running modern debian with OpenBox. For heavier tasks, it was hitting swap (using a web browser). Upping it to 2 gb ram fixed that.
Edit: this also came with an ATI Mobility Radeon 9700 gpu which probably has a bit more support than the PowerVR gpu in the Atom.
I think that seems like a good idea
you could add another layer of swap in between ram and disk by using zram
. as it compresses swap in ram with a very fast compressing algorithm it effectively expands the ram size
You might wanna try out Pale Moon. It's optimized for single-thread performance and takes up a bit less memory.
I also have a netbook with an Atom N2600, I overclocked it from 1.6GHz to 2.0GHz, upgraded from 1GB to 3GB of RAM, and replaced the old HD with an SSD, I then installed MX Linux, 32 bits version, Xfce, and it works pretty well. Only huge webpages are slow, but everything else is about still usable
Whats the tool/command name in the 1st picture that shows you the resources usage?
Also, if you like htop, youre going to love btop.
btop makes the dedicated gpu turn on, wasting energy and disrupting its power saving. yes, this can not be disabled in btop, so it happily shows no load on the gpu. gee, thanks.
That's just htop, a pretty well-known cli system monitor
Looks like htop.
sudo apt-get install intel-media-va-driver-non-free
Video will still be clunky but less clunky.
The atom cpu in this has a powervr sgx545 gpu which is barely supported by anything. Ubuntu 12.04 has some support but it's only 2d acceleration.
It does support 64-bit though?
Yeah, the processor does. The laptop as a whole doesn't.
I did some searching and this may be because Asus has disabled the functionality in the BIOS, or much of the peripherals don't support 32-bit. I have no idea what it is tbh, and I don't really care at this point.
With 1GB RAM you're better off with 32bit anyway, as applications will use less memory. Sick setup though, I hate electronic waste so it delights me to see sim old tech getting a second life.
x32 mode may be an option to take advantage of some more registers/instructions, but I'd assume not many distros support that as a platform.
I have a netbook with the same CPU and it works, but there are no GPU drivers, even on Windows for x64
there might be an BIOS update you could try
i don't think it will fix 64 bit and even if it did 32bit apps probably take less memory for storing addresses.
on my AOD255E 64bit just works :tm:
I have an Asus EeePC where the latest BIOS update straight up removed the option for AHCI and hard wired IDE compat mode. Luckily, I had kept the previous version and downgrade was possible.
Are you me? I have a very similar ASUS with similar hw and it's rocking MX 32bit, if you want more cutting edge stuff, you can switch to 32bit Void (xbps is blazing fast, but the docs aren't Arch-wiki-quality)
I’m curious why links2
over, say, w3m
?
It feels like none of the terminal browsers are as nice as they could be these days…
I had both installed and was using them side-by-side. links2 was easier to learn and configure so I chose it over w3m, then uninstalled w3m.
Also edit: terminal browsers(at least links2) are surprisingly good if you just want read Wikipedia, browse memes, use search engines, and other static stuff once you get the hang of it.
Are you still using the original HDD it came with, or did you change it? I have an old All-in-one, 2012 Celeron with 2GB RAM which was supposed to be my nephew's first computer, I installed Xubuntu 18 on it, everything works fine, even some online video watching, but dear lord the R/W speeds are atrociously low, which makes starting up any program a small test of patience.
It's the original, slow HDD. And yeah, loading GUI programs is a pain but I don't notice any unresponsiveness in tty, which is how I use it for 90% of its uptime.
well, you heard the website 😂 now install waydroid and their mobile app
Man, this is sick.