Linked by Howard Fosdick on Wed 4th Aug 2010 18:19 UTC
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RE[2]: Comment by mrAmiga500
by mrAmiga500 on Wed 4th Aug 2010 19:46
in reply to "RE: Comment by mrAmiga500"
I'm posting this from a PC with a Pentium 3 running Haiku. It runs fine and boots very fast. Haiku is very friendly with older PCs.
I've found Haiku to be a bit unstable compared to BeOS - and it doesn't support many of the sound & network cards you'll find in older discarded computers (at least most of the computers I've tried it with). I'm hoping Haiku improves, but I don't expect them to start supporting old cards. They're (rightly) too busy trying to support newer hardware.
I'm posting this with BeOS on Pentium III. I also have Linux on another drive that I plug in occasionally when I want to rip CDs or view embedded flash. BeOS is my main OS though. It's WAY more fun to use on this computer than Linux.
Another great thing about BeOS (and Haiku) - you can create a complete bootable installation (with Firefox, VLC, graphics editor, music player, etc.) using as little as 300Mb disk space.
Edited 2010-08-04 20:00 UTC
RE[3]: Comment by mrAmiga500
by 2501 on Fri 6th Aug 2010 15:27
in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by mrAmiga500"





Member since:
2005-11-15
I'm posting this from a PC with a Pentium 3 running Haiku. It runs fine and boots very fast. Haiku is very friendly with older PCs.
One trick I use to get extra performance out of older PCs is to use a disk controller card. You can add UIDE 133 or even SATA capabilities to an old PC. Faster disk access = faster PC!