I’m looking to mainly use it for school and was wondering if there’s any recommended distros out there for thinkpads.

Its a Lenovo Thinkpad T480.

  • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    With 8 GB of RAM and 5500 CPU passmark points, that’s a good laptop for Linux Mint. Download their “edge” version of Mint, so you get the latest kernel (so it has more chances of supporting 100% that laptop).

    • WhiteHotaru@feddit.de
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      4 months ago

      This @cheezits@lemmy.ca! I run Linux Mint on a T410 with 4 GB of Ram and a 250 GB SSD and the user experience is quite ok for normal day to day usage like playing light games, browsing and HD video streaming.

    • swooosh@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      DE is more important than distro in regards to RAM. Ubuntu runs on a pi, it should be good on any computer

    • JustARegularNerd@aussie.zone
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      4 months ago

      The question is so generic and open ended it’s not a surprise. The only filter on this is “runs well on ThinkPad” and “lightweight”, which are both up to interpretation

  • Severalkittens@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I daily a t480 with Manjaro and absolutely love it. It’s real snappy and even the hybrid graphics work flawlessly.

  • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    I use Debian stable on mine. I got 16gb of ram but tbh it’s never gone above six in real use, even with a windows vm running.

    E: old thinkpad gang input: take the time to reapply thermal grease to the cpu at some point. It makes a huge difference.

      • Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlM
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        4 months ago

        E: old thinkpad gang input: take the time to reapply thermal grease to the cpu at some point. It makes a huge difference.

        What’s a “gang input”?

        😂 it’s an input to this discussion from a member of the group of people (“gang”) who have experience with old thinkpads. and yes, if your old thinkpad (or other laptop) is overheating and crashing, reapplying the thermal paste is a good next step after cleaning the fans.

  • Red_sun_in_the_sky@lemmy.ml
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    4 months ago

    I used antix for my laptop. Its the most lightweight. I also used Debian on it. Mine is also lenovo. If you want real lightweight use antix I guess.

      • Red_sun_in_the_sky@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        No. I went for antix. Before it ran on manjaro for years. Moved to different distro like last year cause of some hardware issue. Might still go back to it.

        I wanted something very light on the laptop. Mx is fine I guess. But I went ahead with antix at the time.

  • HumanPerson@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    I’m a big fan of Debian stable for school / work laptops. Older packages aren’t great, but if you aren’t someone who needs the newest libreoffice version or something, it works fine. Updates will basically never break it apart from major releases (which you have a few years before you have to worry about, although you can upgrade sooner).

  • NaN@lemmy.sdf.org
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    4 months ago

    Older Thinkpads are very well supported by pretty much everything, so it might be helpful to know more about your experience and what you’ve liked or not liked, and what you intend to run on it.

    Linux Mint or Fedora aren’t bad options, Fedora will require a larger version upgrade at least yearly.

  • minimalfootprint@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 months ago

    If you got a Nvidia dGPU I recommend PopOS. It gave me the best energy options and ability to switch between iGPU and dGPU out of the box. It even found new firmware for my T480 and installed it without a hitch.