Help for Linux on bare-bones 386
James R. Van Zandt
jrv at vanzandt.mv.com
Mon Jan 4 21:02:17 EST 1999
Bill Horne <bhorne at banet.net> writes:
>I've a 386 with 8MB Ram, 5.25 floppies, a 40MB hard drive, with a
>monochrome monitor. Please tell me if it's a viable platform for
>"home office" use, running Linux.
8 MB of ram is enough if you don't run X. 40 MB is too little disk
space. One option you might consider: get a CDROM drive and a CDROM
with a "live" filesystem, so you don't have to put /usr on the hard
disk. (I have not set up this kind of system, so I can't help with
the details.) This will be slower than a hard disk, but still faster
than the 8088. I would set up at least 4 MB of swap space, to allow
emacs.
For a character-based spreadsheet, check out oleo and sc.
>5. How much of a learning curve will an experienced DOS user have in
>stepping up to Linux? My sister has never used a "point and drool"
>interface, so she's used to using a command line, but I don't want to
>give her a system that's going to need several months to master: she
>has five kids and little spare time.
>6. How much of a learning curve will *I* have to climb in order to
>get this system working? I have used UNIX at school, and know the
>basic commands, but I haven't programmed in years and have never
>assembled an OS from source. What time commitment should I plan for?
You both have a lot to learn, but you will not need to do any
programming. I suggest picking up a copy of "Linux for Dummies".
Incidentally, my rule of thumb is: to make it faster, buy more
memory. to make it easier to administer, buy a bigger disk.
- Jim Van Zandt
***
Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with subject of
"subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" to discuss-request at blu.org
More information about the Discuss
mailing list