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A few years ago, LXLE was my distro of choice for older hardware.

I haven't used it in a while, and now I'm trying to revive an HP Stream (AMD/4GB RAM/32GB SSD).

Anything else I might want to try first, or is LXLE still considered good for lightweight/feature rich?

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[-] cerement@slrpnk.net 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
  • don’t know enough about LXLE itself as a distro
  • but LXDE should effectively be considered “end of life”, the developer is in the process of porting everything over to Qt and working on releases of LXQt
  • with that, for a full DE – Xfce if you like GTK, LXQt if you like Qt
  • or a minimal setup with a WM plus utilities (like Openbox or one of the large selection of tiling window managers)
  • along those lines though, there are still a LOT of lightweight Linux distros to choose from
    • Crunchbangplusplus or BunsenLabs – successors to Crunchbang Linux – usually just Openbox WM and a few utils rather than a full DE
    • plain old Debian stable – proprietary drivers are now part of the installer, no more hunting for a special ISO – can choose your DE or WM during install
    • Alpine Linux – popular for server and container installs, but has its fans for desktop
    • DistroWatch’s selection for Old Computers – LXLE is still on the list
[-] squaresinger@feddit.de 4 points 1 year ago

I can second Xfce. I'm using it on the chroot Linux I run on my phone. It doesn't get much lower end than that, and Xfce performs perfectly.

And it feels much more polished than LXDE.

[-] actionjbone@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks for all this info. It'll help me catch up, I'll check out your links.

this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2023
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