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TinyXP / TinyVista / Tiny7

Which have you used.


  • Total voters
    15
  • 1,501
    Posts
    19
    Years
    Have any of you guys tried them?

    I've tried Tiny7 but disliked how it wasn't even comparable (in terms of features and support of some features) because it didn't work with my Dial-Up wireless broadband ;-;

    TinyXP boasts to use only 40MB RAM and TinyVista boasts to use only 200~ish MB ram :|

    I'm going to try TinyXP on an exFAT partition though I'm not sure if it's supported.
     
    You have to go through a torrent site to get them, and they are highly illegal. I haven't tried them, and have no desire to as about 90% of the features you will look for will be missing. Not recommended. If you're looking for a free OS, then look for someone who has an image of the Windows 7 OS DVD and get a key from Microsoft. It's pointless to use a stripped down Windows installation when you can just as easily go through your current installation and look through the services menu and turn off what you don't need and have the option to turn them back on should you need to. And, as I already stated, it's highly illegal.
     
    Have any of you guys tried them?

    I've tried Tiny7 but disliked how it wasn't even comparable (in terms of features and support of some features) because it didn't work with my Dial-Up wireless broadband ;-;

    TinyXP boasts to use only 40MB RAM and TinyVista boasts to use only 200~ish MB ram :|

    I'm going to try TinyXP on an exFAT partition though I'm not sure if it's supported.
    TinyXP is just a very slimmed XP. It installs like a normal one. So I have heard.

    TinyVista is almost exactly like normal Vista only slimmed down. TinyXP is now exactly like XP with all the security updates and such. Just slimmed. :P

    I am going to put TinyXP on my new harddrive when I get it.
     
    Why not just use nLite or vLite? They're way better than TinyAnything (I say this having used both).

    Sorry, I was thinking of something else, I believe. The first part is still true; you have a greater degree of customization with nLite or vLite, and can trim the installation down by removing what you think is unnecessary.
     
    I would go with the TinyXP i have a nomal XP
     
    I've never heard of it but if linkinpark187 is saying that it's illegal I'm not going to risk it one bit


    :t354:TG
     
    Didn't you guys learn *anything* when Vista SP1 came out and all these 'TinyXX' and 'xLite' installs were unable to install the service pack?
     
    Didn't you guys learn *anything* when Vista SP1 came out and all these 'TinyXX' and 'xLite' installs were unable to install the service pack?
    Meh, that's no fun.

    What I want to see is a TinyMAC or whatever it will be called..I cant find it if there is one. :P
     

    Meh, that's no fun.

    What I want to see is a TinyMAC or whatever it will be called..I cant find it if there is one. :P
    Plenty of the OSX86 install disks (which are now mostly depreciated due to vanilla being preferential) are of this nature; especially the netbook-tailored ones. They tend to remove lots of features an OSX86 user won't conceivably need - like boot-camp and rosetta and generally come in at around the ~3GB mark instead of the 6.XGB of the retail DVD.
     
    My netbook couldn't run that. o: My netbook has a 2GB SSD. Oh well, I would put TinyXP on it if I had a USB Optical Drive.
     
    I lol'd. Mine installed just fine.
    You're one of very few, then :) I figure they put together an OS with in a particular way for a reason; and we're not part of MS and we're not privy to every technical detail of the OS - so what makes us qualified to arbitrarily rip out parts of the OS?
     
    I can think of a few reasons why to strip out parts of the OS. Probably the strongest one is security (though that's not why I do). The fewer components there are in an OS, the fewer ways there are for a hacker to exploit. For instance, removing IE and a lot of its related functionality stops about 60% of viruses cold. And while it is tied in somewhat closely with the OS (I believe in XP, help files would stop working, and the add/remove program dialogue wouldn't function), one of the benefits of the ReactOS project is that these things can be fixed with non-IE reliant stuff (the ROS add/remove programs is arguably better than the XP one, and there's a ROS file that can fix the help problem if you care about it). Not to mention when you remove that stuff, Windows installs faster and you have more room on your HDD for other stuff.

    That's not to say there aren't downsides. If you remove a functionality that you later find you need, there's no way to add it back without reinstalling (AFAIK). And apparently there were problems with SP1 that I didn't know about, too. Plus, if you remove a security feature, you might find the OS is less secure instead of more secure.

    just becareful you guys dont want it to show invalid or non genuine
    WGA is basically spyware. I don't want it to show genuine OR non genuine. I don't want it installed.
     
    Didn't you guys learn *anything* when Vista SP1 came out and all these 'TinyXX' and 'xLite' installs were unable to install the service pack?


    well tinyXP wont have any SP compatibility issues because updates on it has ceased unless its a critical update :D

    and stripping an operating system of many of its features is perfectly justified :/

    If you own XP, why cant u use TinyXP? Or TinyVista if you own Vista

    Thats not illegal because you can get similar results by tweaking your own operating system / install image, and doing that is not illegal
     
    well tinyXP wont have any SP compatibility issues because updates on it has ceased unless its a critical update :D

    and stripping an operating system of many of its features is perfectly justified :/

    If you own XP, why cant u use TinyXP? Or TinyVista if you own Vista

    Thats not illegal because you can get similar results by tweaking your own operating system / install image, and doing that is not illegal
    I don't really think you're legally allowed to tweak your operating system's core files.
     

    I don't really think you're legally allowed to tweak your operating system's core files.
    No. You're allowed to do pretty much whatever you want, provided you don't redistribute the end result.
     
    No. You're allowed to do pretty much whatever you want, provided you don't redistribute the end result.

    Show me that part of the EULA please. :D
     


    Show me that part of the EULA please. :D
    Notice: the following is copyrighted text, reproduced here for informational purposes. This qualifies as fair use under US copyright law. The original license contents can be found here.

    8. Scope of License
    The software is licensed, not sold. This agreement only gives you some rights to use the software. Microsoft reserves all other rights. Unless applicable law gives you more rights despite this limitation, you may use the software only as expressly permitted in this agreement. In doing so, you must comply with any technical limitations in the software that only allow you to use it in certain ways. For more information, see https://www.microsoft.com/licensing/userights. You may not

    • work around any technical limitations in the software;
    • reverse engineer, decompile or disassemble the software, except and only to the extent that applicable law expressly permits, despite this limitation;
    • use components of the software to run applications not running on the software;
    • make more copies of the software than specified in this agreement or allowed by applicable law, despite this limitation;
    • publish the software for others to copy;
    • rent, lease or lend the software; or
    • use the software for commercial software hosting services.
    You may not reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the software. Other than that, you can hack it up pretty much however you want. Even then, that part of the license is restricted by applicable law.
     
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