Ask HN: What is your favorite low-end setup you've ever done?
I really like to see what the most modern/productive setup is that you can run on a piece of hardware. My favorites include a NetBSD desktop with current software I ran on a ca. 2000 mid-range desktop a few years back, or, even more delightfully hacky due to ppc32, a debian-ports system I've got running now on a PowerBook G4.
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[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 122 ms ] threadThen a cronjob will post that data to a website.
All on that machine.
For a while I've also used it as a minimal webdev environment with no real performance problem.
Those specs would have been mainstream 15 years ago, when I had to replace my first thinkpad in 2007 the Acer I brought had a GB of ram and that was a budget machine. Worked very well after I upgraded the OS from Vista to XP.
LOL
Hacking a netbook into something I use daily has been more useful in the current context than all my Raspberry Pi hackery - last year I turned a 3A+ into a neat portable server, and that was a lot of fun, too:
https://taoofmac.com/space/blog/2019/08/22/2023
...but ultimately less productive.
I still use my 1015PX EEE on a regular basis - the keyboard is flaky (dust under the keys?) but it comes in handy to share network via Ethernet connection to a something without WiFi
No USB 3 and only 2GB of RAM isn't great; although you can browse simple websites reasonably well, and I was surprised streaming live YouTube content in VLC works fine
edit: I think I'm wrong about this, a little googling shows that support for 4gb ram on atom n550 is dodgy at best. I don't remember taking a soldering iron to it. I really did Ruby webdev on a machine with 2GB ram, crazy!
The HP MicroServers are like that
These games aged very well and I miss the graphical simplicity of XP. I used to edit movies on it in windows movie maker.
Later I also did the mains relay thing too - but I put them in a metal box. Safety first ;)
- Remembered a todo or note? Type note in your browser address bar with keyword 'pin' prefixed
- Note gets saved in markdown document like todo.md, grocery.md and watchlist.md. 'pin' is the keyword I have configured for my Pi server and browser thinks its a search engine.- A http shortcut on Android when clicked shows a dialog box with todo.md contents.
- Edit/View notes using mapped network drive in your favorite markdown editor both on desktop/mobile. You can also view all the notes in your browser.
[0]: https://github.com/quaintdev/pinotes
Using a get request to write the one-line notes is really nice - though do you handle any sort of auth with this? Can FF be configured to handle that with the shortcuts?
I love the idea of running this at home and being able to access it from anywhere - and it being a simple webpage.
Edit: I just took a look at the source and no, no auth - though for home-network constrained things this could still be cool.
I like the novel approach to it :)
I currently use an HP Stream 11 Pro that I got for not quite $100. I was going to run Linux on it, but the trackpad was unusable for me without lots of tuning of low-level parameters. It is usable as a dev box for static HTML sites, using VS Code on Windows 10, even non-GUI WSL2 Linux basics. 4GB of RAM, 6 Watts of heat.
Windows is a huge amount of work for me, but learning PowerShell or Python doesn't require a ThreadRipper. Or 1080p video.
I have other machines that I use for my day job, but it's such a fun little computer to use.
The programs I use are configured to have a minimum of toolbars and such to save on screen space.
There's also a Pentium 4 PC that I've installed a time-appropriate stack on - Windows 2000, Visual Studio 6, etc - to see if I was wrong to assert Wirth's law. I wasn't, the thing flies.
I wish that Asus had continued that line-up -- especially now with common touch and high res small glass displays.
ultrabooks seem to have won, but I love 7-9 inch laptops as a form factor. The typing takes some getting used to, but the size is such a nice convenience factor.
I liked the T42 a lot (I still have it). All in all, I guess it is time for HN to re-discuss Joey Hess' minimal setup:
https://usesthis.com/interviews/joey.hess/
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4721645
https://joeyh.name/blog/entry/xmonad_layouts_for_netbooks/
Or Jason Rohrer:
https://usesthis.com/interviews/jason.rohrer/
http://hcsoftware.sourceforge.net/jason-rohrer/simpleLife.ht...
http://eschatologist.net/blog/?p=266
I occasionally think about trying to find one and installing NeWS & HyperNeWS to see if it really was a nice as I remember.
A couple of MBPs have came and went during this time, I've kept going back to the W530. You got a great deal, though, I originally paid around $2300 for mine!
However, for some reason the Zip drive was always trashing even though the system wasn't swapping. But the setup worked.
It acted as a firewall, reverse proxy cache and if you used nmap on it, it showed up as a network printer.
They aren't quite so much fun any more, sadly, as Debian no longer runs properly on 32 megabytes of RAM.
https://elinux.org/ZipIt
- around 2005; HP Ipaq pocket pc + Zaurus C860 with network adapter; I did all my document writing, programming, server admin, online buying/selling on the combi of these two; very light to travel. Pretty perfect even for quite long times on the road
The Zaurus I used until 2010 around; I still have it and it still works perfectly.
- around 2011; OpenPandora + iPhone, same setup as the above but more powerful ; still as portable; on the Pandora I could/can do mostly anything I need to do for work; php/ruby/c#.net/python/haskell/lua. The Pandora battery can be swapped, so I carried 2 extras which means a week of work while weighing absolutely nothing...
- around 2018-now; GPD pocket 1 + iPhone and it's x86 while having very good battery life with debian/i3wm, so same as above but with a lot more freedom. It's far less repear-able though than the Pandora and the Pocket 2 is really not as good (I sold it; it was annoying to work with compared).
Oh yeah, editing code on a live server. Also probably never again.
Also used to run a Hackintosh setup on a Samsung NC10 netbook.