09-20-2019, 02:56 PM
[member=5239]torreydale[/member]
Yeah I agree. I use a 16.04 Ubuntu live disk (which could be LL too in a lot of cases) all the time for all sorts of things, and though I'm a Debian guy, the only time I use a Debian live disk is to save time if UEFI booting stuff goes awry on an existing Debian installation. Lightweight doesn't really mean what it's chatted up to be anyway. How a system is configured relative to its hardware is how resource efficiency is achieved, not the amount of software in the system. True even for Windows 10. Nothing is more lightweight than custom installations of pre-seeded Debian or basic Arch Linux of any flavor.
TCÂ
Yeah I agree. I use a 16.04 Ubuntu live disk (which could be LL too in a lot of cases) all the time for all sorts of things, and though I'm a Debian guy, the only time I use a Debian live disk is to save time if UEFI booting stuff goes awry on an existing Debian installation. Lightweight doesn't really mean what it's chatted up to be anyway. How a system is configured relative to its hardware is how resource efficiency is achieved, not the amount of software in the system. True even for Windows 10. Nothing is more lightweight than custom installations of pre-seeded Debian or basic Arch Linux of any flavor.
TCÂ
All opinions expressed and all advice given by Trinidad Cruz on this forum are his responsibility alone and do not necessarily reflect the views or methods of the developers of Linux Lite. He is a citizen of the United States where it is acceptable to occasionally be uninformed and inept as long as you pay your taxes.