These last few weeks i been toying with a legacy P55C/X4 200 MHz (i586) desktop, equipped with only 96 MB RAM and a BiOS dating back to 1996~1997. So many ISOs were evaluated in such process now my memory feels like a piece of swiss cheese, somehow reading my hand-written notes doesn't help put order in those observations at all...
That was quite epic, hence it didn't hurt having its old hard-disk replaced by an SSD connected through some female SATA to 40-pins male IDE adapter. Nonetheless, the succession of frustrating experiments eventually diverted my attention toward another museum item: the Acer Aspire One D250, featured with Intel's Atom N270 (Diamondville) low-power CPU, a small/modest i686 laptop with better external VGA resolution, still plagued by USB 2.0 limitations besides its requirement for a 32-bits OS. Yet i thought that could speed up my selection a bit before it's time to revisit the other dinosaurus.

It seems one of my reasonably satisfying experiences on the Atom was with Porteus 3.2.2 Cinnamon i586, via a YUMi-exFAT USB thumbdrive because CD/DVD writing is time consuming to the extreme. This one is based on Slackware 14.2 which itself refers to the Linux kernel version 4.9.0 (SMP), not so old it wouldn't handle multi-media (like PDF, GiF, MP3, RM, MOV, WMV, MPG, FLV, MP4 and M3U) content. In comparison, i'd expect my best chances with Microsoft seem to be Win2K Pro SP4 with a swapfile, having video, sound and network drivers ready as well.
The thing is i'm confident Linux could compete much better if only it hadn't dropped 32-bits support at v3.8, while today's one exception is TinyCorePlus 16.0 with a fresh v6.12.11 kernel! So, i hate the idea that Windows shall rule forever in retro-computing and that's why i thought of suggesting that Porteus should take advantage of this and occupy the 32-bits niche once again, though exploiting code that's 20+ years younger than Microsoft's obsolete alternative.
In short, how about a Tiny Porteus v6 challenge with its feather-weight desktop environment built around 'Fast Light Tool Kit' (v1.4.2, 2025-Feb-23), e.g. still in active development on GitHub!, plus 'Fast Light Window Manager' (v1.02, 2006-Jun-30)??
It might turn out being so small we'd hardly notice such inclusion on a 32/64 bits Porteus 6 version.
