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Peppermint OS is attempting a comback

Started by buster, August 07, 2023, 03:11:40 PM

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buster

The review is not good, but there is now a new crew trying to resurrect the lovely low resource option after the death of the creator. I used it for awhile and found it quite comfortable and quick. Everything you need, and nothing you don't.

https://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20230807#peppermint
Growing up from childhood and becoming an adult is highly overrated.

Jason

One of the problems I have in taking the Distrowatch reviews at face value, at least for every distro is that they test them in virtual machines. Virtual machines have emulated hardware (software pretends to be hardware) and need specialist kernel drivers. I don't know how the hardware it emulates compares to common hardware used by real people. But there's no argument that things are slower for a VM. A live distro might be a better way to go about it. It'll likely be slower than a VM (if it doesn't fit into RAM entirely) but at least you'll find out if it works on your hardware. Unfortunately, not all distros let you test it this way.
* Zorin OS 17.1 Core and Windows 11 Pro on a Dell Precision 3630 Tower with an
i5-8600 3.1 GHz 6-core processor, dual 22" displays, 16 GB of RAM, 512 GB Nvme and a Geforce 1060 6 GB card
* Motorola Edge (2022) phone with Android 13

Jason

Maybe I spoke too soon, the review mentions the author testing it on his ASUS, so maybe he tested it on bare metal along with a VM?
* Zorin OS 17.1 Core and Windows 11 Pro on a Dell Precision 3630 Tower with an
i5-8600 3.1 GHz 6-core processor, dual 22" displays, 16 GB of RAM, 512 GB Nvme and a Geforce 1060 6 GB card
* Motorola Edge (2022) phone with Android 13

fox

Every DistroWatch review I can ever remember reading has tested distros on both virtual machines and bare metal.
Ubuntu 24.10 on 2019 5k iMac
Ubuntu 24.04 on Dell XPS 13

buster

"Every DistroWatch review I can ever remember reading has tested distros on both virtual machines and bare metal."

I'm pretty sure you're correct Mike.

I use virtual all the time, and sometimes my virtual is as fast if not faster than the host. Depends on two things - how much memory and hd is allotted to it, and how old and cluttered the host is. And of course my virtual is pretty limited in software because I only use it for specific things. It stays a bare bones distro.

In fact it may run in memory alone at times which would be quick. If I used it like my host with multiple programs open it would probably come almost to a stop.
Growing up from childhood and becoming an adult is highly overrated.