GNUser, thank you. I am very aware about many alternatives
, and indeed I used xfe & co. But I am upset with the rest.
I was forced to use UEFI from January 2016 (near latest laptop) until 2023. It allows BIOS simulation but then it saw just 4 GB RAM instead of 8 GB RAM. Also HP (f**k them!) firmware has bugs: dmesg shows that it does not allow PCI ACPI low SATA power management, few Fn-keys (video luminosity +/-) not reconised, so I need to map them to scripts to use them etc. But in Windows 10 all was OK. Because extra heating, these bugs prematury destroyied my APU /GPU + the cooling pasta and now the latop runs noisy. In the end I bought a new laptop (again UEFI +Win11).
But there are other linux not solved problems , in general: huge CPU microcode to load initialy, huge GPU firmware for AMD kernel drivers. Then Xorg ask for its 3D drivers which depend on LLVM (100+MB).
Now, even without all those (firmware + drivers big size), I need a secure browser for banking, so firefox is mandatory. But this sucker asks for GTK3 and all its dependency hell.
Summary: it does not help me too much if FEW software are small, but mostly all others have huge demands.
Today I have no problem because I have a lot of RAM (32 GB) +SSD (1000 GB) +CPU (13th gen) for shiny/bloated Win11. But I am still afraid about extra heating because HP firmware not suitable for linux (distroing my investment/laptop).
My observation is that LINUX (not necesary Tinycore) goes in the wrong direction for me. And TC must keep aligned with increased kernel, bloated software (asking for biger libc, not compiling old software, etc).
And today Win11 is 10x over my needs in Security + Functionality: Edge/Firefox + 7zip + Notepad++ , MSOffice/LibreOffice and VLC covers 110%. The incentives to switch back to Linux are constantly dimishing. I like linux and minimalism but sometime the price is too harsh.