I have been gifted a few ancient laptops from the stone age (2005-2014). Any ideas on what I can do with them? Are there any modern Linux distros that would run on old hardware like this? I’ll take any suggestions this wonderful community has to offer.

Edit: The laptops are:

  • Imnecomrade [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    23 hours ago

    Something I have wanted to do is take an old laptop, convert it to a desktop, create a case for the screen and motherboard, wall mount the case, add a device like a leap motion for touch controls, and use it as a smart home control panel and/or a fancy weather clock with apps installed for sticky notes, photo album, etc.

    Unfortunately the newest laptops you have are just a generation shy of meeting the minimum cpu requirements (AVX instruction necessary) for the leap motion in particular, but there may be alternatives.

    I also suggest turning them into emulation boxes.

  • daniyeg [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    I have been gifted a few ancient laptops from the stone age

    oh so laptops from 1990s? cool i love to have one actually

    (2005-2014).

    excuse me? what? 2014 is ancient? fr? am i this out of touch?

    (im not old, new technology pricing is just too much for me. im still stuck in 2016 hardware wise).

      • daniyeg [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        1 day ago

        our computer still had a floppy drive until around 2016 i think. good times. unfortunately everything we had on floppy was for DOS not windows xp and i was just a kid so i didn’t know how to get DOS working.

      • RedRook1917 [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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        2 days ago

        My bad I didn’t mean for people to catch strays lol. I’m ‘old’ relatively speaking age wise. I just meant how tech older than 5 years is considered old. I could go on a rant on how wasteful and stupid that concept is but unfortunately its the way of the world today.

  • The_sleepy_woke_dialectic [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    The most important thing is whether it’s 32 or 64 bit. If it’s 32 bit you’re going to need a special distribution for 32 bit computers. 64 bit you’re probably fine with just about anything honestly.

  • pinguinu [any]@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 days ago

    You may try Puppy Linux or anything with XFCE like Xubuntu

    There’s Tiny Core Linux if you wanna take it to the extreme

  • Boise_Idaho [null/void, any]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    I think the main thing to check is whether it can run 64-bit OS and whether it has SATA ports for an SSD.

    I was able to run Arch with some tiling WM using this old laptop: https://www.newegg.com/asus-u50-series-15-6-intel-core-i3-330m-intel-hd-graphics-4gb-ddr3-memory-500gb-hdd/p/N82E16834220763

    Main issue was playing videos which caused the laptop to overheat. Overall, the performance was not good, but I was still using a laptop HDD instead of an SSD, which would significantly impact its performance. I also had a weird amount of RAM installed like 6GB for some reason lol

  • buckykat [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    There’s gonna be a pretty significant usability difference between a 2005 laptop and a 2014 one, most modern distros would probably run just fine on the latter, while the former would want a specialized lightweight distro.

      • buckykat [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        2 days ago

        Throw a cheap SATA SSD and a second ram stick in the Inspiron 15 3537 or the Satellite C55 and you’ve got a decent little machine for productivity and browsing on a modern distro. The HP 2133 netbook was probably barely usable even in its time, and the Inspiron 1545 might be alright with a lightweight distro like puppy linux.

  • Bruja [she/her, love/loves]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    Have an old ThinkPad that has a first-gen Vulcan GPU, and with Proton Sarek and Bazzite use it for light gaming while away from desktop. Tried several other distros and getting support for old hardware was frustrating but Bazzite worked out of the box.

    Another has Chimera Linux and the setup guide was easy to follow and had a smother time with it than any automated install, which was a surprise as it was really intimidating. It uses replacements for old, slow software and runs lean. Only Wayland, no Xorg. Dinit instead of systemd. BSD userland instead of GNU coreutils (so “doas” instead of “sudo” and such). So lean, fast, responsive even on the older hardware since there’s no legacy overhead.

    Still, YMMV and depending on hardware and goals there are dozens of distros for older hardware to try out. That eLive retrowave one is fun and feels like using an even older laptop and dazzles onlookers but is certainly not going to be to everyone’s taste.