Hmmm... that's a tall order. The small amount of memory is going to make 
running a GUI painful. You should definitely shop around on Ebay for 
laptop memory for it. And of course the small hard drive will limit you. 
There may be larger hard drives available.

You probably want to read these:
http://www.linux-laptop.net/
http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Laptop-HOWTO.html
http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/4mb-Laptops.html

I recommend a minimal install of Debian and tell it _not_ to install 
everything and the kitchen sink at the first reboot. There are other 
Linux distributions out there: TinyLinux, PeanutLinux, etc., that are 
suited for old laptops but they require more Linux knowhow than Debian 
to add software. Use Blackbox|Openbox|Fluxbox as your window manager.

Even if you don't add any new hardware to it, you should first decide 
which word processor and spreadsheet apps you will want to use. 
OpenOffice won't run well at all with 32MB as it needs Java running, 
which is a resource pig. I'd say you need at least 64MB for OpenOffice. 
And running Gnumeric will require Gnome, which is another resource pig.

If I were you, I would look for a text mode word processor and 
spreadsheet app, which will run great on such an old laptop. And the 
text mode browser "links" does a good job at correctly formatting HTML. 
You could even run the old DOS version of Lotus123 under dosemu.

Using text mode apps means you won't have to install X, which will save 
you a lot of room. I've done similar installs in the past on old 
laptops, so keep us in the loop about how it goes. You will definitely 
learn alot about Linux trying to squeeze it on this laptop! :)

Good Luck!

John Hebert

Chopin Cusachs wrote:
> 
> I was blessed with an early Christmas present,
> an IBM ThnkPad from the early 1990s.  It is a
> 486 33Mhz with 32MB of memory and a roughly
> 300MB hard drive.   Does not support CD, but
> has 2.88 MB floppy drive.  Battery is bad, but
> it runs DOS.  No network, but does have serial
> and parallel ports.
> 
> Would like to find a distribution of Linux that I
> could install from floppies to support word
> processor and spread sheet.  Anyone know of
> something that might fit this need?
> 
> Choppy

-- 
John Hebert
System Engineer
I T Group, Inc.
225-922-4535

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