I applaude your optimism, but .... when Zorin is the champ of Linux with only 503 downloads do you think the guys in Redmond will get nervous?The "Linux Hardware Database" website indicates that Zorin OS is the most downloaded Linux operating system in the past month.
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This data only shows the number of downloads for the past month; it has nothing to do with operating system competitions. The statistics for the past year still show Ubuntu and Linux Mint as the top two distributions overall. When I posted the statistics, I was thinking that we "as Linux enthusiasts" had another good distribution to use and suggest to other interested users.I applaude your optimism, but .... when Zorin is the champ of Linux with only 503 downloads do you think the guys in Redmond will get nervous?
I'll have to try Windows 11 LTSC. I mean, minimum system requirements for LTSC are 2 GB RAM.No more than W 8.1
You can try W 10 LTSB, not far demanding than 8.1, but its support will end Oct 2026.
RAM aside, W 11 LTSC will not install at the first place; the CPU is not supporting SSE 4.2I'll have to try Windows 11 LTSC. I mean, minimum system requirements for LTSC are 2 GB RAM.
I forgot about that part.RAM aside, W 11 LTSC will not install at the first place; the CPU is not supporting SSE 4.2
Your best shot is W 10 IoT LTSC, supported until Nov 2031I forgot about that part.
The real issue with devices with small RAMs these days is not the operating system itself, but rather the fact that more software requires more RAM. For instance, I have an old laptop with 1 GB of RAM, and I installed MX Linux on it. The operating system functions well, but when I open Firefox, it freezes completely. In this situation, even if I tried to install something lighter, opening a browser will always be problematic.I installed ZorinOS Lite on a old laptop with Pentium T4300 and 2 GB RAM. It runs like garbage. On the other hand, Windows 7 works flawlessly. I don't know what to install on it to still be somewhat usable for surfing the web.
Yoo may be able to use the browser but with maximally two tabs open for not heavy websites.The real issue with devices with small RAMs these days is not the operating system itself, but rather the fact that more software requires more RAM. For instance, I have an old laptop with 1 GB of RAM, and I installed MX Linux on it. The operating system functions well, but when I open Firefox, it freezes completely. In this situation, even if I tried to install something lighter, opening a browser will always be problematic.
Statcounter measures web activity, not the installed base (the actual number of physical devices sitting in homes or offices).View attachment 296790
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Desktop Operating System Market Share Worldwide | Statcounter Global Stats
This graph shows the market share of desktop operating systems worldwide based on over 3 billion monthly page views.gs.statcounter.com
Try Lubuntu; it's the lightest Linux distribution with a desktop environment right now. Other options rely on window managers, which require some getting used to because they use keyboard shortcuts rather than mice.I'll have to try Windows 11 LTSC. I mean, minimum system requirements for LTSC are 2 GB RAM.
Windows 7 with Hard_Configurator if it still has an W7 profile option, or an older version that has it?On the other hand, Windows 7 works flawlessly. I don't know what to install on it to still be somewhat usable for surfing the web.
old laptop would have TPM 2.0 so it would install win11...?? (see after the fact this was addressed... )I'll have to try Windows 11 LTSC. I mean, minimum system requirements for LTSC are 2 GB RAM.
On that laptop, even the OS itself is painfully slow. You know how the PC runs without drivers? Yeah, it runs like that. And screen is blurry no matter which resolution I choose.The real issue with devices with small RAMs these days is not the operating system itself, but rather the fact that more software requires more RAM. For instance, I have an old laptop with 1 GB of RAM, and I installed MX Linux on it. The operating system functions well, but when I open Firefox, it freezes completely. In this situation, even if I tried to install something lighter, opening a browser will always be problematic.
I will. Thanks!Try Lubuntu; it's the lightest Linux distribution with a desktop environment right now. Other options rely on window managers, which require some getting used to because they use keyboard shortcuts rather than mice.
Unfortunately, the only web browser still working on Windows 7 is Firefox ESR but it's supposed to drop support for a few months.Windows 7 with Hard_Configurator if it still has an W7 profile option, or an older version that has it?Or are there no secure browsers that run on W7?
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Windows 11 LTSC version doesn't require any of the bullsh!t normal Windows 11 requires.old laptop would have TPM 2.0 so it would install win11...?? (see after the fact this was addressed... )

500MHz CPU, 512MB RAM, and 6GB disk, so your laptop should be able to run it.I asked chatGPT about win11 LTSC (& win10 LTSC) and it says it is hard for consumers to get it lWindows 11 LTSC version doesn't require any of the bullsh!t normal Windows 11 requires.