Updated
Updated · ZDNet · Jun 11
ZDNET Shows How Alpine Linux Becomes a 5 MB Desktop OS
Updated
Updated · ZDNet · Jun 11

ZDNET Shows How Alpine Linux Becomes a 5 MB Desktop OS

1 articles · Updated · ZDNet · Jun 11

Summary

  • ZDNET says Alpine Linux can be turned into a very fast desktop system, though it warns the setup is best suited to users with at least some Linux experience.
  • A base Alpine image of about 2.67 to 5 MB keeps the distro minimal and security-focused, but that also means it ships without a desktop environment, bash, sudo or many common tools.
  • The guide walks users through a text-based install, then adds KDE Plasma via setup-desktop after enabling the community repository and installing bash, sudo and related packages.
  • NetworkManager must be started manually for some apps to detect connectivity, and ZDNET also notes Alpine does not ship with a firewall by default, recommending ufw for desktop use.

Insights

Is Alpine's 'crazy-fast' desktop worth the complex workarounds for common applications?
Is Alpine Linux sacrificing its minimalist identity to attract more desktop users?
Do compatibility hacks for popular apps undermine Alpine's acclaimed security advantages?