unusable
I hope that’s autocorrect?
unusable
I hope that’s autocorrect?
I hope so.
It looks really promising for home users. At this point I’ve moved to zfs because of proxmox though, so it isn’t as relevant to me as it once was.
It says 10.1" right in the summary. That’s not full dimensions, but it should give you a ballpark.
I was interested in bcachefs years ago, but Kent seems to keep shooting himself in the foot when it comes to getting any traction with it.
I have Tiny Core running on a PII 333MHz machine with 128MB of RAM
This might be a better question for !selfhosted
Shopify sponsorship is a little iffy.
deleted by creator
Sounds like Tobi’s on another side-quest.
It has a repo with programs you can install. The selection is fairly limited though.
http://wiki.tinycorelinux.net/doku.php?id=wiki:install_apps
That computer is in the basement and I’m not having any luck finding a list of what’s available.
Tiny Core would probably run on it.
I have it on a PII 333MHz with 192MB of RAM from 1999. It grinds to a halt if I try to open pretty much any modern website though.
Embrace, extend, extinguish
From Suse. It looks like V1 and V2 are maintenance only these days.
Looking at the rancher GitHub it looks like they can’t decide which direction they want to go.
So, basically Rancher?
Oof. Yeah, that would be tough.
I think I have a floppy or two around, but the only drive for them is on that machine and I wasn’t really willing to put any money into the project.
Looks like it would work. I did have an adapter lying around that let me use a CF card instead of a spinning disk, so that helped.
The biggest hassle was getting the thing to start because boot from USB didn’t really exist back then so I had to burn a CD and the drive on that machine is kind of flaky these days.
Though I will say that it’s not exactly usable. Pretty much any website makes it grind to a halt. But it’s good right up until then.
And if your computer can’t even handle that, there’s always Tiny Core.
My 25 year old PII with 192MB of RAM is surprisingly responsive with TCL.
OEMs aren’t paying $100 per license. They’re also making deals with McAfee/Norton/whatever to package a bunch of extra crap on your windows laptop to lower the price further.