Press "Enter" to skip to content

Easy Linux Distro Hopping with MultiSystem

Our resident Linux newbie is off and running. Not only is he single booting his Lenovo IdeaPad to Ubuntu Mate, he’s using the FOSS app “MultiSystem” as a down and dirty way to check out lite distros for his ancient resource challenged Sony Vaio. We couldn’t be prouder.

The Linux Gadabout

Running Ubuntu MATE for the past week, my Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 13 has so far been a dream — perhaps too much of a dream, because it’s allowed me to waste even more time playing Sid Meier’s Civilization: Beyond Earth without interruption than Windows 10 ever could. But on my significantly more ancient and RAM limited Sony Vaio, Ubuntu MATE seems to be more of a resource hog than I’d like. Sure, it still runs better than the Windows XP that came pre-installed, but it doesn’t mean we can’t do better.

Per FOSS Force reader suggestions, options I might expect to run more smoothly than Ubuntu MATE on my Sony Vaio include:

And these are just the tip of the iceberg! But here are the most convincing arguments so far.

Juan:

“Xfce will run slightly better than MATE, but not that much on so little RAM. Fluxbox-based distros do better on low resources machines; maybe Enlightenment also could work.”

Gary:

“I’ve been running MX-15 on several old netbooks with 1 GB and a first gen Intel Atom. That distro has outperformed everything else I have tried by a large margin including Mate, Xubuntu, and several LXDE variants.”

Don Nadie:

“I also think Ubuntu MATE is too heavy for your old Vaio. Back up your hard drive and start trying light distros especially made for old hardware. I had amazing results with Puppy Linux Trusty on an 1996 HP notebook with a Pentium II 333 MHz and 256 MB of RAM. It ran great because the entire OS fit into memory and didn’t have to access the hard drive to fetch any part of Linux.”

But here was an interesting suggestion from RandyNose I’d almost missed — one that might allow me to easily try all of the above and more with as little fuss as possible:

“Install MultiSystem, and use a 8 or 16 gig drive (USB 3.0 preferred even if your system can’t use it; I find they tend to be faster due to disk speed) to put multiple distros on. And yes, I left it in French. LOL. Just for the fun of it.

## Ajoutez le Depôt de MultiSystem
sudo apt-add-repository 'deb http://liveusb.info/multisystem/depot all main'

## Ajoutez la clé publique
wget -q -O – http://liveusb.info/multisystem/depot/multisystem.asc | sudo apt-key add –

## Rechargez les sources
sudo apt-get update

## Installez MultiSystem
sudo apt-get install multisystem

“Or view it on the MultiSystem page:
http://liveusb.info/dotclear/index.php?pages/install

“But don’t translate the page and use the commands — it won’t work. Translate it to see what it is they’re saying, and then un-translate to copy the commands into a terminal.”

MultiSystem
Well, slap me with a baguette! MultiSystem works! Sacre bleu!

If your French — like mine — is très crappy and an English rundown for installing MultiSystem (and what to do with it once you’ve done so) is a little more helpful, this one from Linuxmen fit the bill for me. It’s quite possible you’ll get the gist of it by the interface alone because it seems like it might be pretty intuitive for experienced users (e.g., people who aren’t me). But if you get hung up, drop me a line below and I’ll try to walk you through it, because my shoes have already been there.

Remembering that my biggest hindrance in getting Ubuntu MATE onto my Sony Vaio in the first place was a lack of USB booting options in its BIOS, I was pleased to see MultiSystem’s interface allowed me to install Plop Boot Manager via its non-free menu. (It’s technically donationware, but I didn’t get any nagging prompts to remind me of this fact.)

Thus far I’ve given MultiSystem a successful — albeit brief — spin with Puppy Linux on my Sony Vaio to make sure it works. I’ll report my findings with this and some of the other suggestions for Ubuntu MATE alternatives next time around. If anyone has recommendations for other distros that might run well on a machine that’s just over a decade old, let me know below; I’m open to trying anything once!

7 Comments

  1. RandyNose RandyNose August 11, 2016

    Glad you found it useful. 🙂 I’ve found that installing Puppy Linux via this didn’t work so well, if memory serves me right. As not everything will work via this method, but it’s a good utility to have around. 🙂

  2. Robert Glen Fogarty Robert Glen Fogarty Post author | August 11, 2016

    Thanks again for turning my head in its direction, Randy! Funny thing is: using this, Puppy worked like a charm on my very first go! But maybe it’s possible I’m using a variation from what you’ve tried in the past?

  3. RandyNose RandyNose August 11, 2016

    Yea, things might have changed, but I think that trying to install Puppy from Multisystem might have been the odd thing to do. I think that trying it was fine. Some distros are better installed using via other methods. But if I recall correctly Puppy Linux will install to a thumb drive, and save files to that same drive, or another drive. Still fun, still useful. Just never something that I ever installed on a hard drive for myself to use long term. The problem I seem to have with the lighter distro’s isn’t with the distro’s themselves. It’s that the machines can’t process the web pages that are thrown at them all that well. But that’s just my take.

  4. RandyNose RandyNose August 11, 2016

    Ok, and Have I mentioned, to try Slax [slax.org] and Salix [salixos.org] if you’re looking for little light Disto’s?

    I had Salix on a old Pentium M 512megs of RAM for some time. It was used pretty much as a Digital Picture Frame, and I could stream music from it if I wanted.

    Also, I think there’s some other distros discussed even here on FossForce. 😉

    So, yes, as a newcomer, you’ve got a fire-hose of data coming at you.

  5. CFWhitman CFWhitman August 15, 2016

    I too use Salix (the Fluxbox variation) on an old Thinkpad from 2003. I took the RAM from the 256MB that I received it with (someone gave it to me because of how old it was in 2009, I think) to the 1GB max, but the only real difference I’ve noticed from doing that is that Firefox ESR doesn’t crash as easily when you hit complex pages. I suppose if I were to use it regularly, I’d appreciate the difference if I wanted to edit images or something like that.

  6. Robert Glen Fogarty Robert Glen Fogarty Post author | August 16, 2016

    My eventual goal is to turn this rowdy old machine into a single-purpose appliance — probably a digital jukebox kind of thing. So a light distro should still do the trick; I’ll leave Web browsing to my newer, faster devices!

  7. Miguel Mayol Tur Miguel Mayol Tur August 20, 2016

    You can try Manjaro default XFCE and the fluxbox, JWM and i3 spins if you.

    But multisystem has a problem, it does not let you have Manjaro spins at the same time, so you must uninstall or add manually – editting grub – and as it is not an ISO boot – I do not why – copying renaming, uninstalling, several times to get all of them working at the USB, but not at the desktop GUI if it is what you want.

    I think Yumi and I was wrote that easy2boot also let you use PLOP TO MULTIBOOT YOUR PENDRIVE (MULTIBOOTUSB is other package for this matters I think do not have PLOP support)

Comments are closed.

Breaking News: