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Tiny Core Linux 13.0 released for older or lower-end x86 hardware

25 pointsby muterad_murilaxover 3 years ago

2 comments

gompertzover 3 years ago
Used Tiny Core as a daily driver for nearly 5 years. While it certainly is good at running on older hardware, the title is a bit misleading as that's not really the focus of the project... It's just a consequence of it being such a lean and nimble distro. It is blazing fast on modern machines.
watersbover 3 years ago
I&#x27;m surprised (and pleased) to see further updates from Tiny Core.<p>The base choices are glibc&#x2F;busybox, versus the musl&#x2F;busybox of Alpine. Are there places where the base Tiny Core would be useful in containers or other deployment schemes?<p>I&#x27;ve generally kept it around as a simple environment I might use to boot old hardware, perhaps to run diagnostic tools. I got used to using the System Rescue CD instead; it was a familiar Gentoo starting point. Although System Rescue has switched to a different base for Linux, it&#x27;s still OpenRC.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.system-rescue.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.system-rescue.org&#x2F;</a><p>And somewhere along the way, I dropped the ancient laptop habit. The world is a better place.<p>Still, I&#x27;m glad I have the option of a Tiny Core setup. You never know...