Arudius 0.5:
+The ISO has only 208 mb and already comes with a browser;
+-Boot in 16s, but stops inside a terminal;
-You need to manually login and startx;
-It uses Fluxbox as default DE, but, just like pure OpenBox, it seems messy for my taste;
-In general seems unpolished;
-Was discontinued in 2013;
Austrumi64 3.6.4 x64:
+ISO has 308 mb, which is a-m-a-z-i-n-g considering that it comes with Firefox 52 and LibreOffice 5.3.3.2;
+Boot in 16s;
+After boot: 130mb;
-Themes are very inconsistent. It's easy to get lost after changing from one to another. And, depending on the current theme, some options don't do anything, like Configs -> Resolution;
-Common shortcuts don't work, like ALT+F4 or ALT+TAB or WIN+D, etc;
-The multimedia package isn't good;
-In general seems unpolished;
AntiX 16.1 x64:
-ISO has 680 mb;
-The most confusing when trying to download. Too many versions and no readme explaining anything at all;
+Boot in 14s;
+After boot: 104 mb RAM -- amazing!
+Comes with Firefox 42.6;
-Just like Arudius, it comes with Fluxbox as default DE, which seems messy for my taste;
-ctrl+alt+del shortcut opens a dialog that basically doesn't work;
-Too many applications that do the same thing;
-In general seems unpolished;
Bodhi 4.1.0 x64 + Enlightenment:
-ISO has 686 mb;
-The slowest to boot: 43s;
+-After boot: 300 mb of RAM;
+-Enlightenment is one of the most elegant DE, but at the same time it's very confusing with countless options badly spread;
-Doesn't come with anything except a simple browser. So no multimedia package, no task manager, no pdf reader, no torrent client, no archiver manager, no calculator, etc.
-ALT+F4 changes current desktop instead of closing focused app;
-Freezes at reboot/shutdown;
+-Has a module activation system just like Porteus, but I didn't understand it very well: where are the modules, what's the actual file format of them, how can I create one, etc;
+-In general looks promising, but I need to invest more time to better understand its details;
Slax 7.0.8 x64 + KDE:
+ISO has 225 mb;
+Boot in 17s;
+After boot: 280 mb of RAM;
+Comes with Firefox;
+Comes with Pidgin;
+Great multimedia package;
+I don't like KDE 5.x version, but this 4.10.1 version that comes with Slax seems consistent and pleasant;
-Depends on Slackware package updates, which isn't as quick as Arch;
+-Comes with module system just like Porteus, but when you activate a module it disappears (i.e. it's moved to an unknown place);
+Probably the most polished distro in this post;
-Was discontinued in 2013;
Porteus 3.2.2 x64 + LXQt 0.11.1:
+ISO has 234 mb;
+Boot in 14s;
+After boot: 204 mb of RAM;
-Doesn't come with a browser;
-Some packages are really old, like Xorg, Mesa and FFMpeg, for example;
-Depends on Slackware package updates, which isn't as quick as Arch;
+Clean and consistent graphic interface;
+All common shortcuts in place;
+Solid multimedia package: can basically open any audio/video;
+Comes with a consistent package: torrent client, calculator, task manager, pdf reader, smartphone/camera file manager, simple text editor, partition tool, image viewer, archiver manager (this is the only exception regarding consistence, since we have both P7zip and Engrampa, but because Engrampa has a great interface although it doesn't open all files that P7zip can open);
+Very flexible: can persist files or not, and in many ways. I like to script only what I want to persist, so each boot I have a fresh system;
+Applications are inside single-file package that can be installed/removed with a double-click;
+Simply rocks