help install ubuntu 04/18/1 on the 1.70GHz processor [duplicate]
This question already has an answer here:
How do I find out which version and derivative of Ubuntu is right for my hardware in terms of minimal system requirements?
8 answers
Will my device work with Ubuntu?
2 answers
Can I install Ubuntu 04/18/1 LTS on a processor with two cores and 1.70GHz?
Will it not work or just slow down?
system-installation ubuntu-gnome
New contributor
marked as duplicate by Kulfy, karel, guiverc, N0rbert, WinEunuuchs2Unix Jan 6 at 16:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
How do I find out which version and derivative of Ubuntu is right for my hardware in terms of minimal system requirements?
8 answers
Will my device work with Ubuntu?
2 answers
Can I install Ubuntu 04/18/1 LTS on a processor with two cores and 1.70GHz?
Will it not work or just slow down?
system-installation ubuntu-gnome
New contributor
marked as duplicate by Kulfy, karel, guiverc, N0rbert, WinEunuuchs2Unix Jan 6 at 16:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. I'd suggest you try it and see. Myself I'd choose a lighter flavor (GNOME as used by 18.04 LTS is rather heavy on cpu & memory when compared to lighter desktops such as LXDE or XFCE). Up until last month I was QA-testing x86 Xubuntu & Lubuntu 19.04 on single-core pentium M & dual core pentium 4 systems & was extremely happy with the results (other things than just cpu mattered, eg. for some things I preferred a i915 video card over amd radeon, and ram size makes a huge difference) So why not test it on your actual hardware yourself? including lighter flavors.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:18
I went & looked up my QA-testing for today; it included a c2d-e6320 [1.86ghz dual core intel] for Lubuntu 19.04. Its pretty close, but I may never have run 18.04 Gnome on that box (it has 14.04 LTS still installed); and to me a lighter flavor makes more sense.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:37
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
How do I find out which version and derivative of Ubuntu is right for my hardware in terms of minimal system requirements?
8 answers
Will my device work with Ubuntu?
2 answers
Can I install Ubuntu 04/18/1 LTS on a processor with two cores and 1.70GHz?
Will it not work or just slow down?
system-installation ubuntu-gnome
New contributor
This question already has an answer here:
How do I find out which version and derivative of Ubuntu is right for my hardware in terms of minimal system requirements?
8 answers
Will my device work with Ubuntu?
2 answers
Can I install Ubuntu 04/18/1 LTS on a processor with two cores and 1.70GHz?
Will it not work or just slow down?
This question already has an answer here:
How do I find out which version and derivative of Ubuntu is right for my hardware in terms of minimal system requirements?
8 answers
Will my device work with Ubuntu?
2 answers
system-installation ubuntu-gnome
system-installation ubuntu-gnome
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked Jan 6 at 12:03
Ян БлокЯн Блок
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
marked as duplicate by Kulfy, karel, guiverc, N0rbert, WinEunuuchs2Unix Jan 6 at 16:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by Kulfy, karel, guiverc, N0rbert, WinEunuuchs2Unix Jan 6 at 16:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. I'd suggest you try it and see. Myself I'd choose a lighter flavor (GNOME as used by 18.04 LTS is rather heavy on cpu & memory when compared to lighter desktops such as LXDE or XFCE). Up until last month I was QA-testing x86 Xubuntu & Lubuntu 19.04 on single-core pentium M & dual core pentium 4 systems & was extremely happy with the results (other things than just cpu mattered, eg. for some things I preferred a i915 video card over amd radeon, and ram size makes a huge difference) So why not test it on your actual hardware yourself? including lighter flavors.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:18
I went & looked up my QA-testing for today; it included a c2d-e6320 [1.86ghz dual core intel] for Lubuntu 19.04. Its pretty close, but I may never have run 18.04 Gnome on that box (it has 14.04 LTS still installed); and to me a lighter flavor makes more sense.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:37
add a comment |
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. I'd suggest you try it and see. Myself I'd choose a lighter flavor (GNOME as used by 18.04 LTS is rather heavy on cpu & memory when compared to lighter desktops such as LXDE or XFCE). Up until last month I was QA-testing x86 Xubuntu & Lubuntu 19.04 on single-core pentium M & dual core pentium 4 systems & was extremely happy with the results (other things than just cpu mattered, eg. for some things I preferred a i915 video card over amd radeon, and ram size makes a huge difference) So why not test it on your actual hardware yourself? including lighter flavors.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:18
I went & looked up my QA-testing for today; it included a c2d-e6320 [1.86ghz dual core intel] for Lubuntu 19.04. Its pretty close, but I may never have run 18.04 Gnome on that box (it has 14.04 LTS still installed); and to me a lighter flavor makes more sense.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:37
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. I'd suggest you try it and see. Myself I'd choose a lighter flavor (GNOME as used by 18.04 LTS is rather heavy on cpu & memory when compared to lighter desktops such as LXDE or XFCE). Up until last month I was QA-testing x86 Xubuntu & Lubuntu 19.04 on single-core pentium M & dual core pentium 4 systems & was extremely happy with the results (other things than just cpu mattered, eg. for some things I preferred a i915 video card over amd radeon, and ram size makes a huge difference) So why not test it on your actual hardware yourself? including lighter flavors.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:18
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. I'd suggest you try it and see. Myself I'd choose a lighter flavor (GNOME as used by 18.04 LTS is rather heavy on cpu & memory when compared to lighter desktops such as LXDE or XFCE). Up until last month I was QA-testing x86 Xubuntu & Lubuntu 19.04 on single-core pentium M & dual core pentium 4 systems & was extremely happy with the results (other things than just cpu mattered, eg. for some things I preferred a i915 video card over amd radeon, and ram size makes a huge difference) So why not test it on your actual hardware yourself? including lighter flavors.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:18
I went & looked up my QA-testing for today; it included a c2d-e6320 [1.86ghz dual core intel] for Lubuntu 19.04. Its pretty close, but I may never have run 18.04 Gnome on that box (it has 14.04 LTS still installed); and to me a lighter flavor makes more sense.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:37
I went & looked up my QA-testing for today; it included a c2d-e6320 [1.86ghz dual core intel] for Lubuntu 19.04. Its pretty close, but I may never have run 18.04 Gnome on that box (it has 14.04 LTS still installed); and to me a lighter flavor makes more sense.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:37
add a comment |
0
active
oldest
votes
0
active
oldest
votes
0
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Welcome to Ask Ubuntu. I'd suggest you try it and see. Myself I'd choose a lighter flavor (GNOME as used by 18.04 LTS is rather heavy on cpu & memory when compared to lighter desktops such as LXDE or XFCE). Up until last month I was QA-testing x86 Xubuntu & Lubuntu 19.04 on single-core pentium M & dual core pentium 4 systems & was extremely happy with the results (other things than just cpu mattered, eg. for some things I preferred a i915 video card over amd radeon, and ram size makes a huge difference) So why not test it on your actual hardware yourself? including lighter flavors.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:18
I went & looked up my QA-testing for today; it included a c2d-e6320 [1.86ghz dual core intel] for Lubuntu 19.04. Its pretty close, but I may never have run 18.04 Gnome on that box (it has 14.04 LTS still installed); and to me a lighter flavor makes more sense.
– guiverc
Jan 6 at 12:37