This seems as good a place as any to ask. I have a shitty old laptop that ran Arch pretty good, but I’m not good enough at Linux and I managed to fuck it up. Something about the root partition being full, and discussions about the fix went over my head. So I pulled all my stuff off of it and installed Mint like my other computer has, because it’s braindead easy to use. But even Mint Xfce runs like doo doo on this machine.
Is there any good middle ground that’s more beginner friendly than Arch, and runs on weaker machines than Mint?
Just plain Debian, with either xfce or i3. I have a rediculusly old laptop that runs them both fine. I generally prefer i3 on it because the touchpad is pretty terrible, but xfce works well with a real mouse.
Void should be fine if you’ve used arch before. You’ll likely have an awkward moment when you go into xfce and there’s no audio playing with your music/video, but you can get it working by linking pipewire’s folder under /etc/sv into /var/service. There’re other ways too
Is it actually your drive slowing you down? Do you have a hard drive or SSD? You could run ReadSpeed to see the speed at different segment of your drive. If it’s slow across the whole thing, that’s probably why it’s so sluggish. If it’s just the beginning and end of the drive on an SSD, you might be able fix it.
You could try basic Debian, maybe with lxqt?
I never see the point of Debian derivatives anyway.
Or maybe try out one with a lightweight wm like fluxbox or icewm.
These are more barebones i think. last time i used fluxbox many years ago it did everything i needed and was pretty cool.
maybe . . . MX linux " the most popular linux distro" /s
Except i think they ban systemd.init so lots of debian based help wont necessarily work.
Meh - maybe none of these are good answers to your question.
Hey, it’s this meme again!
This seems as good a place as any to ask. I have a shitty old laptop that ran Arch pretty good, but I’m not good enough at Linux and I managed to fuck it up. Something about the root partition being full, and discussions about the fix went over my head. So I pulled all my stuff off of it and installed Mint like my other computer has, because it’s braindead easy to use. But even Mint Xfce runs like doo doo on this machine.
Is there any good middle ground that’s more beginner friendly than Arch, and runs on weaker machines than Mint?
Just plain Debian, with either xfce or i3. I have a rediculusly old laptop that runs them both fine. I generally prefer i3 on it because the touchpad is pretty terrible, but xfce works well with a real mouse.
Void should be fine if you’ve used arch before. You’ll likely have an awkward moment when you go into xfce and there’s no audio playing with your music/video, but you can get it working by linking pipewire’s folder under /etc/sv into /var/service. There’re other ways too
Is it actually your drive slowing you down? Do you have a hard drive or SSD? You could run ReadSpeed to see the speed at different segment of your drive. If it’s slow across the whole thing, that’s probably why it’s so sluggish. If it’s just the beginning and end of the drive on an SSD, you might be able fix it.
Lubuntu is a smaller install and will run well on a toaster. It is made for older computers. When no os runs well chose Lubuntu.
Or Xubuntu!
But honestly Mint is the way to go for new guys.
True. Any Ubuntu spin offs would work as they have more support for newbies to help get things working.
Let’s build it out even further. Linux Mint Debian Edition with XFCE.
You could try basic Debian, maybe with lxqt?
I never see the point of Debian derivatives anyway.
Or maybe try out one with a lightweight wm like fluxbox or icewm. These are more barebones i think. last time i used fluxbox many years ago it did everything i needed and was pretty cool.
maybe . . . MX linux " the most popular linux distro" /s Except i think they ban systemd.init so lots of debian based help wont necessarily work.
Meh - maybe none of these are good answers to your question.
Linux from scratch