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Usage for Old Notbook

So my wife has a 10 year old low end notbook. 500Gb of storage (HDD), 2GB of GDR3 RAM, and an intel Celeron Processor N2806. It originally came with Win 8, then she "upgraded" to win 10 and after that it was pretty much unusable. I am talking CPU and Ram about 80-90% in idle, opening a browser got everything down to a crawl. She mostly used it a storage and brwosing, watching youtube and occasionally to write. So I (also a Linux newbie) finally got the time to install a newbie friendly Os (Fedora) and it's so much better! I am Talking 20%CPU usage and 50%(?) RAM in idle.

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  • I also got an old notebook, atom N260 32 bits, 3GB of RAM. I put a 128GB SSD, then I installed MX Linux with Xfce (MX21.3_386) and it's usable for light tasks. Yes browsing heavy sites is slow, but everything else works pretty well.

  • The first thing is to get a total of 4 GB ram (looks like the max for this cpu) into it and an ssd. These are both very cheap atm. See if there's a video available for your particular model on the internet about getting into the case for the upgrade. Install a lightweight Linux distro. I have a similar 11 year old laptop and it's working nicely for browsing/video play etc. with Zorin Lite. Good luck!

  • I know many people in the self-hosting community re-purpose old laptops as lightweight web servers. If you're interested in learning Linux, this machine would be a good one to learn on for a lightweight distro.

  • Puppy linux would be fun to run on a machine like this one, but fedora with Gnome is light enough 100% better then win 10

  • You did good opting for a Linux distribution, but Gnome (Fedora's desktop environment) is still pretty heavy: they recommend 4GB ram at least.
    I would suggest a more lightweight desktop environment like LXQt. The best distributions that ship it are:

    • Fedora LXQt edition: if you're already used to Fedora commands and dnf package manager
    • Lubuntu: probably the most user friendly for beginners
    • SparkyLinux: for users that are a little more advanced but that has the lightest and most rock solid base (Debian)
58 comments