- Jul 10, 2018
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I use my old Dell as a backup.. Windows wants to install 10 on it.. It barely runs Windows 7. Is 10 less resourceful, and will it run on it?
I use my old Dell as a backup.. Windows wants to install 10 on it.. It barely runs Windows 7. Is 10 less resourceful, and will it run on it?
Single-core? Unless it's an AM2/AM3 AMD-platform chipset special laptop (owned one, from Walmart on BF one year, wasn't too bad, supported early H/W accell flash playback, helped with early Hulu full-screen video), then I would say that you're probably out of luck on the Win10 thing. I woudn't do it.Don't do it. Too many incompatibilities with old hardware.
I use my old Dell as a backup.. Windows wants to install 10 on it.. It barely runs Windows 7. Is 10 less resourceful, and will it run on it?
You can still install Windows 10 for free on any computer running Windows 7 or 8.1, or by fresh install using the Windows key that came with it.The "free update" promotion through Windows Update was only a tool used by Microsoft to boast about how people loved their new OS.I thought the free Windows 10 upgrades were over, certainly the nags are, unless you a massively behind on updates.
Did they tell how long ago they brought that old notebook? IMHO, computers older then 5 or 6 years are not really worth it to bother upgrading. And even that is depending on the CPU is.I may have the chance to work on, and hopefully, "Upgrade", an "older laptop" soon. I know nothing about it, other than someone I know wanted me to "Upgrade and speed it up, by putting Win10 on it".
I guess MS marketing is up to their old tricks,making claims that new OSes speed up old PCs. (Ok, sometimes they do, and sometimes, they don't.)
I just hope it's faster than a Brazos laptop. Those are painfully slow, and doubly-so when running 64-bit OSes.
I told them that just putting Win10 on it alone, might not speed it up, but that I could install an SSD, and that would speed it up.
Hopefully, it has an accessible HDD / SSD bay.
As far as my personal laptops go, I bought a 386SX monochromre "lunchbox style" Compaq for $20 at a flea one time, about 8-10 (20?) years ago. I also purchased a 486SX color Thinkpad a long time ago too.Did they tell how long ago they brought that old notebook? IMHO, computers older then 5 or 6 years are not really worth it to bother upgrading. And even that is depending on the CPU is.
good candidate for a linux distro
As far as my personal laptops go, I bought a 386SX monochromre "lunchbox style" Compaq for $20 at a flea one time, about 8-10 (20?) years ago. I also purchased a 486SX color Thinkpad a long time ago too.
My Dad bought me my first "Real" laptop, a brand-new HP with XP and an ATI X300 chipset iGPU (could play UT99!), DVD-RW (was a new thing for "budget" laptops at the time), it was glorious. I wish now that I hadn't gotten rid of it, I liked having a portable XP machine, that could play and burn DVDs.
I forget what it had for a processor, I think it was an Intel, but maybe it was an AMD. Been so long I don't remember. (Edit: I think it was an Athlon XP-era Mobile Sempron.)
Oldest working laptop in my stable, is probably my MSI A5000, with a dual-core Celeron T3100. (Core2-class CPU.)
And thanks to Intel's product segmentation, Celeron CPUs back in the day, intentionally had their power-saving features disabled, so that Celeron-based laptops intentionally had less battery life than the "proper" Pentium Mobile CPUs. (Cue @moonbogg 's Intel hate theme music.)
But even that one ran Windows 7. (Even better when I upgraded to an SSD.)
So, unless this mystery laptop is somehow seriously old, like 2.5" IDE HDD old or older, then I feel I can probably shoe-horn Win10 on there somehow.
We are talking Athlon Pentium 4 age computer here.
I highly doubt that any modern Linux distro will even be usable with only 512MB RAM and a single core CPU unless the use does everything from the command line or use a carefully configured Window Manager.Circa 2005 goes on eBay for $35 to $50 with 512MB RAM and slow IDE 80GB HD.
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I highly doubt that any modern Linux distro will even be usable with only 512MB RAM and a single core CPU unless the use does everything from the command line or use a carefully configured Window Manager.
Given that modern refurbished systems with decent specs can had for under $300 and we can build decent spec desktops for not really that much, I really don't see any point with messing with really old hardware.Agreed. It's not worth the bother.
Last year I tried to get Linux working on my old C2Q/8800GT. I tried about half a dozen distros, and the GPU drivers were extremely problematic. Massive screen tearing, and slow performance. I got grief from Linux advocates claiming it was my fault for expecting Modern Linux to support "ancient HW" (That Windows supports just fine).
So I take these, "your ancient computer will run better with Linux" claims with a huge grain of salt.
Note: I am not a Linux Newbie. I started installing Linux on my home PC in the mid 90's with a stack of Slackware floppies I built on my Universities net connection, and have installed in multiple iterations since, and I have set up Linux Web servers from scratch at work.
I have a Dell 1525
Intel Core 2 Duo (Merom) 5550 @ 1.83GHz
Runs Well Win 10 Pro with 4GB RAM
I consider it to the Lowest possible Laptop to Run Win 10 with No quirks.
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The Dell 6000 memory was pushed to 2 GB the HD is 80GB Seagate
Intel Pentium M (Dothan) 1.60GHz
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Using the same simple Bench Mark for all three.
____________Dell 1525______ Dell 6000______I5 2500 K
General Score 87000 __________27000 ________290000
Mem _________9500 ___________3700_________41000
HD/SSD SSD-II 30000 ______HD 5500 ___SSD-II 35000
GDI _____________5500__________2300 _________16000
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