> i would like to know if somebody got experience with running audio apps on a 
> small as possible distro tailor made for your own machines.
If you have truly ancient machines, dyne:bolic is probably your best 
bet:http://dynebolic.org/
Its successor is Puredyne:http://puredyne.org/

I was also looking to see if Puppy Linux has some sort of audio "puplet" (its 
name for a distribution, kind of) but I don't think it does.
On the other hand, most Linux systems will run OK on older hardware, but they 
probably won't handle the desktop environment. So, depending on hard drive 
space, you could just get e.g. UbuStu and switch GNOME for  Xfce or LXDE.
Another option is to get a "generic" lightweight Ubuntu (Lubuntu, Xubuntu) and 
install the apps/packages as needed. You'll probably need to install the 
realtime kernel, however. (Assuming that's important - you can actually get 
pretty good latency with the generic kernel, at least as good as latency on 
Windows.)
-Karl.
                                          
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