I successfully booted Puppy 1.0.8r1 on an old Dell P133. It took a while to figure out what specifically was needed to get it to boot successfully. We finally figured that we needed to try to find more memory to put in the computer (originally trying to install using 32MB memory). In order to get it to boot, I had to have a Linux swap partition and add another 8MB of RAM. Haven't yet had a chance to try to install Puppy to the hard drive -- that's Monday's project.
Computer Specifications:
Model: Dell P133v Desktop
Processor: Pentium 1, 133MHz
Memory: 40MB
Hard drive: 2GB (approximately) with 64MB swap partition
CD-ROM: 12x
No sound, generic VGA video card and monitor
PS/2 mouse and mini-DIN keyboard
Puppy 1.0.8 works on a P133
-
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Wed 29 Mar 2006, 19:40
- Location: Flint, MI
- Contact:
- Lobster
- Official Crustacean
- Posts: 15522
- Joined: Wed 04 May 2005, 06:06
- Location: Paradox Realm
- Contact:
if you were wondering where . . .
if you were wondering where . . .
quote]A snapshot of Puppy2 alpha, dated March 29th, has been uploaded. This is not an official release. It is for Puppy testers and developers. Get it from here:
http://www.puppyos.com/test/ [/quote]
quote]A snapshot of Puppy2 alpha, dated March 29th, has been uploaded. This is not an official release. It is for Puppy testers and developers. Get it from here:
http://www.puppyos.com/test/ [/quote]
That is pretty amazing, Barry. I have a box of old Cyrix s somewhere and a pile of S7 boards. Loadsa old P60/75/90 kicking about in skips which are ideal for Puppy! The presence of a swap file or partition can dramatically lower the memory requirements, as sylvie and others have reported. For useful running speeds, I try to bump up the RAM to 48Mb, though.