Tale of two Ubuntus

Two of the systems I planned on trying out with the Mebius were Ubuntu versions, one four years older than the other. Results were what I anticipated, although there was a small surprise attached.

The console version of Ubuntu 10.04, as I expected, wouldn’t even start. My experiences earlier this year foretold that a machine with a meager 32Mb of memory wouldn’t get past the grub menu.

And that was the case this time too. Ten-point-oh-four left me with a few nifty error messages (“error: cannot allocate real mode pages,” and “error: you need to load the kernel first” were common) and a feeling of inferiority.

Dropping back four years, just out of curiosity, worked fine. The installed system booted to a console prompt and needed something less than 11Mb to run. The wireless network was up with a little prodding, and all was well with the world.

Adding a graphical environment was a fruitless exercise though: The Trident driver that far back gave nothing but scrambled eggs for video output. TinyFlux had its artifacts, but a minimal X in Ubuntu Dapper was pointless.

Oddly enough though, a full-blown Ubuntu 6.06.1 desktop could handle a graphical environment neatly, with no obvious defects or artifacts, showing the deep brown background from ages gone by.

Unfortunately that’s all it showed. Anybody can tell you that a full Gnome desktop on 32Mb is nothing but a pipe dream. The machine was swapping before it ever snapped out of the console.

Eventually it just spun to a crawl, freezing with the drive light fully on. As expected.

Not much was gained here in this little experiment, and I acknowledge that. It does however reinforce a few experiments from a long time ago, when I started out with minimal systems and built them up.

Next up, a few systems that might actually have a chance of working. 🙄

7 thoughts on “Tale of two Ubuntus

  1. Calvin

    “Perhaps one day it shall become a toaster, and make small children happy by giving them warm toast to eat”

    I lol’d hard.

    You need to get a 376 PC though. Run early Slackware for an exercise in pain!

    Reply
  2. Ridgeland

    Try Slitaz. I have it on a G5-200, a Gateway 2000 PC with a Pentium 5 running at 200 MHz. It does have 256 of RAM though.

    Reply
    1. K.Mandla Post author

      Ridgeland, you’re late to the party. 😉

      https://kmandla.wordpress.com/2010/09/20/good-but-bad-slitaz-at-150mhz-32mb/
      https://kmandla.wordpress.com/2008/04/02/slitaz-10-on-450mhz-k6-2-256mb/
      https://kmandla.wordpress.com/2010/03/29/greetings-from-slitaz-3-0/
      https://kmandla.wordpress.com/2009/12/13/howto-install-a-console-only-slitaz-system/
      https://kmandla.wordpress.com/2008/11/11/slitaz-to-the-rescue/
      https://kmandla.wordpress.com/2008/08/22/or-you-could-just-use-slitaz/

      And so on. … 😈

      Reply
  3. Pingback: Links 25/9/2010: The 5 Dollar KDE Challenge, Etc. | Techrights

  4. Pingback: The also-rans « Motho ke motho ka botho

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