Linux distros for older hardware (Linux.com)
Posted Feb 25, 2006 14:53 UTC (Sat) by
maney (subscriber, #12630)
In reply to:
Linux distros for older hardware (Linux.com) by Arker
Parent article:
Linux distros for older hardware (Linux.com)
that hardware is no longer adequate for performing the exact same tasks I was doing then?
Nope. Not if you're willing to use the exact same software you were using then. The same old software will still run the same way on the same old hardware. It's when you want to run newer versions of things, versions that have improved in all sorts of ways (some of which you may not care about if, eg., any non-English, let alone non-Western, language is irrelevant to you; or if you never view any sites that rely upon current standard XHTML and CSS to control their layout) that you'll find they may not be a good match for your same old hardware.
Of course the problem is that you don't really want to do things exactly the same way you were doing them then. You may not care about some, or even most, of the things that have changed, but you want to use the newer versions of programs for doing the exact same tasks. But they do more than that, and of course there's a price to be paid for that.
This is nothing new. This same inflation has been going on in pretty much the same way since the days when 640KB of RAM really did seem as though it ought to be more than enough for anything you might want to do, and a 20MB hard disk was almost unthinkably vast. And that wasn't even so very long ago...
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