raymac46 Posted September 20 Share Posted September 20 (edited) Back in 2017, I had been trying out Arch Linux installs in a Virtual Machine, and I wanted to do an install the Arch Way on bare metal. All I had to experiment on was a pathetic 2010 Toshiba netbook that was bad when it was new. It was so underpowered that it could not even run Windows 7 out of the box. My neighbor got sick of it by 2015 and gave it to me. It was a well built junker, so I replaced the HDD with a cheap SSD. Memory was capped at 2 GB. The CPU was fortunately a 64 bit Intel Atom. I got Arch installed. At first I ran Xfce, but later switched to LXQt. So the crazy experiment continues, running bleeding edge software on hopelessly obsolete hardware. I just updated again today. About all this old junker will do is boot up and run the terminal and maybe an ultralight browser. No Firefox, YouTube, or music streaming. But it does show how really stable and great Arch Linux can be. And how good it is for old hardware. Edited September 20 by raymac46 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted September 20 Share Posted September 20 Very cool. The web has killed these old machines, not the software itself. Who would of thought the javascript heavy internet (or Internet 2.0/3.0) would kill the machines. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted September 21 Share Posted September 21 (edited) 18 hours ago, raymac46 said: About all this old junker will do is boot up and run the terminal and maybe an ultralight browser. No Firefox, YouTube, or music streaming. But it does show how really stable and great Arch Linux can be. And how good it is for old hardware. Raymac....it's fun trying to revive the older gear. Even if it doesn't do what you want it to do, it's still fun messing with it. You mentioned not being able to stream music. I know nothing about Tizonia but maybe it'll work for you. For YouTube, there is this YouTube from CLI. I've messed with the basic ASCII video before and also playing movies from the cli with mplayer but I don't remember doing YT from the cli. Maybe you can do something.... give it a try. Edited September 21 by wa4chq 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raymac46 Posted September 21 Author Share Posted September 21 This is certainly not the worst PC I have installed Linux on. That would be a Fujitsu 535Tx Lifebook. Pentium 133, 80 MB of RAM, 2 GB HDD, no wifi, no ethernet, no CD-ROM drive. now *that* was a junker. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted September 21 Share Posted September 21 There is also a Spotify cli client as well as a YouTube music one Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted September 21 Share Posted September 21 (edited) 50 minutes ago, securitybreach said: There is also a Spotify cli client as well as a YouTube music one Yep...saw that but it may require a subscription.....which Raymac might not have. I'm not familiar with Spotify... Edited September 21 by wa4chq Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted September 21 Share Posted September 21 56 minutes ago, wa4chq said: Yep...saw that but it may require a subscription.....which Raymac might not have. I'm not familiar with Spotify... Nah, they both have free tiers with ads. I used to pay for spotify but moved to youtube premium as it gives me youtube and youtube-music without ads 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raymac46 Posted September 21 Author Share Posted September 21 I have found that if I use the lightweight Falkon browser I can stream YouTube music with the Toshiba netbook. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted September 21 Share Posted September 21 6 minutes ago, securitybreach said: Nah, they both have free tiers with ads. I used to pay for spotify but moved to youtube premium as it gives me youtube and youtube-music without ads Cool. I have Amazon Prime but for music, I normally listen to the stuff I have on my RPi . 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted September 21 Share Posted September 21 5 minutes ago, raymac46 said: I have found that if I use the lightweight Falkon browser I can stream YouTube music with the Toshiba netbook. Cool! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raymac46 Posted September 21 Author Share Posted September 21 (edited) I also have Amazon Music but I listen to it (wait for it) via Android streaming from my Smartphone to my hearing aids. Edited September 21 by raymac46 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raymac46 Posted September 21 Author Share Posted September 21 I've tried a bunch of browsers on this netbook but right now the only ones that sorta work are Falkon and Midori. I have removed Otter Browser, Chromium and Vivaldi. They are really a waste of disk space. For now I'm keeping Firefox, but it is painful to use. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted September 21 Share Posted September 21 40 minutes ago, raymac46 said: I also have Amazon Music but I listen to it (wait for it) via Android streaming from my Smartphone to my hearing aids. Nice Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raymac46 Posted September 21 Author Share Posted September 21 Forgot to mention that GNOME Web(Epiphany) browser is also an OK option with the Toshiba. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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