0:47 i mean the website is still better than debian's or arch's I would say its like in the middle behind mint or ubuntu or even fedora but waaay above debain and arch. Adding a youtube video on the top of the website is a bold choice tho
I honestly completely forgot about the existence these websites. Yeah antiX has a far better one. The UA-cam video placement really reminds me of the old manjaro website actually.
@@PapasFilms It could be useful to have a video on the top but unfortunately for the antiX devs the video that they have put has gotten a little old and some stuff from it does not work anymore
I'm still looking for an OS to put on my ThinkPad (S)L510 with an Intel Celeron T3100 and 2 GiB of RAM, maybe antiX might work... I was planning on using NixOS on it, but NixOS *really* requires a good CPU and a good amount of RAM to be actually usable (not that it's heavy when installed, but the installation itself and any updating of it takes forever and is prone to completely locking up the system with so little memory) If HaikuOS worked properly on it, I'd use that instead, because I love it Also, for 10:20, I love the fact that most languages are pre-installed, it makes it super accessible to switch languages on the fly. I'm surprised close to no Linux distribution allows you to select multiple language packs to install when, well, installing the system, it just seems backwards not to offer such a feature.
@@atemoc yeah I know what you mean. NixOS requires a good CPU for most operations. antiX is probably a really good choice for that system. I suggest you at least try it for a bit. The install only takes a couple of minutes! Having multiple languages by default is really great for those who want any language other than English. Sadly, that’s not me. It feels a little bit bloated in my opinion. But yeah definitely not a bad feature by any means.
@@PapasFilms It might "feel bloated", but: - It takes close to no space - It doesn't slow down performances (just slows down updating) - You can remove them And it would still be a nice option to have upon installation (choosing multiple keyboard layouts on installation would also be very useful for me from the past) But yeah, I'll try antiX on it, we'll see how it goes.
@@atemoc I think that the best thing that they can offer is a checkbox that allows you to only install and configure the selected locales. To add a second keyboard layout you can configure it on the live environment and select to keep the live config when installing the system (you can also use the “configure” button on the bottom of the first page of the installer). Yay! Keep me updated!
:3
❤
0:47 i mean the website is still better than debian's or arch's I would say its like in the middle behind mint or ubuntu or even fedora but waaay above debain and arch. Adding a youtube video on the top of the website is a bold choice tho
I honestly completely forgot about the existence these websites. Yeah antiX has a far better one.
The UA-cam video placement really reminds me of the old manjaro website actually.
@@PapasFilms It could be useful to have a video on the top but unfortunately for the antiX devs the video that they have put has gotten a little old and some stuff from it does not work anymore
@Wol-gx6qj 1000% agreed. Sadly, there aren’t a lot of videos that talk about antiX. Especially 23.x
@@PapasFilms yeah i just searched up antiX linux and went to recently uploaded and your video was there
I'm still looking for an OS to put on my ThinkPad (S)L510 with an Intel Celeron T3100 and 2 GiB of RAM, maybe antiX might work...
I was planning on using NixOS on it, but NixOS *really* requires a good CPU and a good amount of RAM to be actually usable (not that it's heavy when installed, but the installation itself and any updating of it takes forever and is prone to completely locking up the system with so little memory)
If HaikuOS worked properly on it, I'd use that instead, because I love it
Also, for 10:20, I love the fact that most languages are pre-installed, it makes it super accessible to switch languages on the fly. I'm surprised close to no Linux distribution allows you to select multiple language packs to install when, well, installing the system, it just seems backwards not to offer such a feature.
@@atemoc yeah I know what you mean. NixOS requires a good CPU for most operations. antiX is probably a really good choice for that system. I suggest you at least try it for a bit. The install only takes a couple of minutes!
Having multiple languages by default is really great for those who want any language other than English. Sadly, that’s not me. It feels a little bit bloated in my opinion. But yeah definitely not a bad feature by any means.
@@PapasFilms It might "feel bloated", but:
- It takes close to no space
- It doesn't slow down performances (just slows down updating)
- You can remove them
And it would still be a nice option to have upon installation (choosing multiple keyboard layouts on installation would also be very useful for me from the past)
But yeah, I'll try antiX on it, we'll see how it goes.
@@atemoc I think that the best thing that they can offer is a checkbox that allows you to only install and configure the selected locales.
To add a second keyboard layout you can configure it on the live environment and select to keep the live config when installing the system (you can also use the “configure” button on the bottom of the first page of the installer).
Yay! Keep me updated!
Can't boot on legacy Nvidia, I go with puppy instead 😁 350 mb ram usage
Really? That’s weird.