Revision [21147]
This is an old revision of WhatPuppyLinuxIsBestForYou made by CrustyLobster on 2012-04-02 04:08:25.
Which Puppy is right for you?
Older hardware
- Wary pup click here. For older computers with around 256MB ram, do a frugal install and add a swap file.
- LegacyOS is a puplet, designed for older hardware
64 bit
- Lighthouse pup 64-bit
- Mariner development of Lighthouse
For newer computers try
Long Term Support
- Wary pup click here. For older computers with around 521 mb ram and 1.8 CPU or similar.
Specialised hardware
- Puppeee eee computers
- Fluppy newer eee computers and netbooks
- PARM ARM not yet available
Puppy Linux has spawned many different versions. Puppy was developed by BarryK Barry Kauler who releases or gives permission to release official versions. Puppy makes it easy to create your own personalised versions or Puplets. This has led to an explosion in unofficial releases and derivative versions.
There are many PuppyVersion different puplets out there now built on different versions of puppy Linux as well as the established builds. Other puppy os
- Puppy Linux news. Find out about some of the puppy builds
Once you have decided the best Puppy OS to use, consider what you use your computer for and what your needs are. Then determine what to install on top of default apps. eg basic emailing, looking up websites like facebook, youtube, chatting online, and other general Internet use, creating documents, editing photos etc.
There are different ways to install puppy
- A general overview click here
- How to create a Full Installation on an Internal Hard Disk Drive click here
- How to make a frugal Puppy installation click here
The size of your hard drive is not usually a problem for puppy Linux, neither is the flash drive size but the save file size (frugal install) you intend to use may be. Mostly with the save file you will not need more than 1-2GB but remember if you are installing puppy Linux on a flash drive that has a fat32 file system due to the limitations of fat 32 you can't save more than a 4GB save file. (Note that fat 32 is still good to use especially if you want to use the same flash drive to store you files on the go for access on any other computer.) It helps to have as little in the save file as you can. So what a lot of puppy users end up doing is saving things such as downloads, documents, music, photos etc, outside the save file, to hard drive or a flash drive.