I have an Acer netbook which I use mainly to just experiment with different Linux distros (I have another laptop for doing "proper" stuff). It's a fairly under powered thing, Celeron 1.5Ghz processor and only 2Gb RAM, and I think only 1.7Gb of that is classed as usable. It is however definitely 64 bit. When I first got it I found the previous owner had installed Linux Mint, but a 32 bit version, which I thought was a little odd, but now I'm finding out why. I've tried FossaPup, BionicPup32 and BionicPup64 so far, and I've had no problems with documents, playing music files or video files, or connecting to my wifi. Must say I'm quite impressed with the simple set up procedure, and how responsive everything is. That is until I go to the internet. Everything's ok to start with, but then after a short while the RAM usage hits 100% (I've monitored it), everything freezes, with no sign of it coming back to life, and I have to switch it off and start again. This only happens with the 64 bit versions, BionicPup32 was fine. I'm running them all in live mode from USB sticks. I've also tried a couple of other Linux distros and I get similar problems with 64 bit versions, so I know it's not just Puppy.
So what to do about it? The issue does seem to be more prevalent with certain websites (the ones with most ads?) but to suggest avoiding those sites isn't really going to be practical. For the time being I can continue using 32 bit versions, but it looks to me as though support for 32 bit anything is disappearing at an alarming rate. Would installing a Puppy make things better, or worse, bearing in mind the pathetic little processor? Would I be better off using an older Puppy? Do any of the older ones use significantly less resources? Or should I be looking more at the device itself for the problem? Any suggestions welcome, and I'm happy to try things out.
Apologies if I've rambled on a bit, or not provided sufficient information, or posted this in the wrong place, or anything else. This is my first post so it may take me a short while to get the hang of things. Thank you