• JerkyIsSuperior@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Depends what you mean by “best”. Personally, I use Lubuntu, as it is an ideal combo of features vs. resource lightness for me. Linux light and Puppy Linux are also among more popular lightweight distros.

    • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Personally, AntiX and IceWM have been the best combo for my old netbook. The lack of systemd does get annoying (some apps directly require it) so I’ve been considering WattOS as a replacement.

    • gunpachi@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      If you like debian you could try crunchbang++ and Antix.

      Or you could install arch or void linux and configure it minimally with xfce or some window manager.

      If you want something fresh , checkout nixos. I have had nixos on my desktop for less than a month now and I’m already considering sticking with it for the forseaable future.

    • daniskarma@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      For me it was arch, as you start literally with only the packages you chose. So you can go as lightweight as you want. You don’t even have sudo unless you install it.

      There was also some debian image that was barebones and let you just install what you want. But I don’t know if they still offer that option.

      Then you don’t even go for a desktop environment, you can just use a window manager, like i3. It’s more lightweight.

      The most lightweight I went without going server was with Arch+i3. But having to install everything you need can be tiring, specially because there are many things you don’t know you need until you find yourself without them.

      It was a little experimental. For a functional thing you can try debian+xfce (though debian ancient packages can be flustrating), I"m generally fine with Linux mint + xfce or mate. It’s not the most lightweight you can go. But it’s easy to install and lightweight enough that will run in most hardware.