F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Notebooks old laptop windows 10?

old laptop windows 10?

old laptop windows 10?

J
jenc0x
Junior Member
7
06-02-2016, 11:08 PM
#1
when disposing of my old laptop, it mainly ran Ubuntu Linux but I also used it on Windows 10 via USB SSD, even though it had very little RAM and was powered through USB. The experience was quite satisfactory.
I wondered if Linux wouldn’t be the best choice for most users, especially with a storage size under 20GB that I didn’t want to upgrade (except maybe adding a spare 32GB SD card). I was thinking about installing Windows instead.
My main question is whether Windows 10 can run on this limited space—considering the RAM and storage—I’m even considering a 32-bit version? Or should I opt for a fresh Linux installation for the next owner?
J
jenc0x
06-02-2016, 11:08 PM #1

when disposing of my old laptop, it mainly ran Ubuntu Linux but I also used it on Windows 10 via USB SSD, even though it had very little RAM and was powered through USB. The experience was quite satisfactory.
I wondered if Linux wouldn’t be the best choice for most users, especially with a storage size under 20GB that I didn’t want to upgrade (except maybe adding a spare 32GB SD card). I was thinking about installing Windows instead.
My main question is whether Windows 10 can run on this limited space—considering the RAM and storage—I’m even considering a 32-bit version? Or should I opt for a fresh Linux installation for the next owner?

N
npalmen
Member
202
06-04-2016, 07:08 PM
#2
excluding third-party apps, your Windows 10 x64 install takes about 100GB. You can verify the disk space needs on the official MS site for each version. Alternatively, you might locate a 120-240GB SSD for $20 to $40.
N
npalmen
06-04-2016, 07:08 PM #2

excluding third-party apps, your Windows 10 x64 install takes about 100GB. You can verify the disk space needs on the official MS site for each version. Alternatively, you might locate a 120-240GB SSD for $20 to $40.

T
ThatEnderman64
Junior Member
47
06-05-2016, 03:35 AM
#3
Windows 10 isn't going to install on even the 32GB drive, so far as I am aware. There is a "lite" version out there that might. It is not official and not really sure what the support landscape looks like.
My opinion would be to put Lubuntu/Ubuntu/etc. on it and sell super cheap. I have had reasonable success doing so with items like Netbooks and such low powered or outdated hardware. There are folks that simply need a cheap way to surf. The plusses are that those OS are so much more user friendly than they were even a few years ago.
T
ThatEnderman64
06-05-2016, 03:35 AM #3

Windows 10 isn't going to install on even the 32GB drive, so far as I am aware. There is a "lite" version out there that might. It is not official and not really sure what the support landscape looks like.
My opinion would be to put Lubuntu/Ubuntu/etc. on it and sell super cheap. I have had reasonable success doing so with items like Netbooks and such low powered or outdated hardware. There are folks that simply need a cheap way to surf. The plusses are that those OS are so much more user friendly than they were even a few years ago.

B
bnorwood
Junior Member
36
06-05-2016, 07:04 AM
#4
Nope. Win 10 won't run smoothly on a 32GB device. It might function, but significant problems will arise. Installing Linux would be a better option and could generate more value.
B
bnorwood
06-05-2016, 07:04 AM #4

Nope. Win 10 won't run smoothly on a 32GB device. It might function, but significant problems will arise. Installing Linux would be a better option and could generate more value.

D
DocOctapus
Member
51
06-05-2016, 03:01 PM
#5
I didn't want to reduce the price from $20 to $40 on a laptop that might only get $50, plus it only accepts low-profile m.2 drives which makes it even tougher to find cheaper drives. Also, I looked up this online and came here for a second view, with people mentioning USB stick drives that fit directly into TVs with 32GB SSDs running Windows 10. I was considering cutting a lot of unnecessary stuff, but honestly it seems simpler to go with Linux.
D
DocOctapus
06-05-2016, 03:01 PM #5

I didn't want to reduce the price from $20 to $40 on a laptop that might only get $50, plus it only accepts low-profile m.2 drives which makes it even tougher to find cheaper drives. Also, I looked up this online and came here for a second view, with people mentioning USB stick drives that fit directly into TVs with 32GB SSDs running Windows 10. I was considering cutting a lot of unnecessary stuff, but honestly it seems simpler to go with Linux.

D
DuckManWoo
Member
103
06-06-2016, 12:58 AM
#6
Put $0 into this. Nothing..nada.
Sell the Linux installation. It's not important what operating system is running. People will either adapt to the Linux setup, try another OS, or realize Win 10 won't function properly.
D
DuckManWoo
06-06-2016, 12:58 AM #6

Put $0 into this. Nothing..nada.
Sell the Linux installation. It's not important what operating system is running. People will either adapt to the Linux setup, try another OS, or realize Win 10 won't function properly.

S
StephanKruger
Member
226
06-06-2016, 02:44 AM
#7
^ SOS I believe those are referred to as "System on a Stick".
If you've looked into them and some of the low-power Surface tablets, there are numerous reviews about problems during major updates.
In a fairly straightforward way, the disk space must be sufficient for both the new and old installations so they can download, install, and set up the .old folder.
Generally, this might not affect you much since they will keep sending security updates for some time, but it will keep reminding you that an update you can't install is coming soon (this has happened even with a 64GB drive).
S
StephanKruger
06-06-2016, 02:44 AM #7

^ SOS I believe those are referred to as "System on a Stick".
If you've looked into them and some of the low-power Surface tablets, there are numerous reviews about problems during major updates.
In a fairly straightforward way, the disk space must be sufficient for both the new and old installations so they can download, install, and set up the .old folder.
Generally, this might not affect you much since they will keep sending security updates for some time, but it will keep reminding you that an update you can't install is coming soon (this has happened even with a 64GB drive).

K
komacheese
Junior Member
9
06-07-2016, 12:46 AM
#8
Seems to be a budget laptop featuring an Intel Atom CPU. It appears difficult to install Windows 10 on the 20 GB internal SSD. Performance should be poor. If the SSD cannot be replaced, reinstall Linux on the device and consider selling it as-is.
K
komacheese
06-07-2016, 12:46 AM #8

Seems to be a budget laptop featuring an Intel Atom CPU. It appears difficult to install Windows 10 on the 20 GB internal SSD. Performance should be poor. If the SSD cannot be replaced, reinstall Linux on the device and consider selling it as-is.