In general, the installation of these five distros, or their usage as live systems, should not present any particular problems, unless you put them on very new, more or less closed hardware, or on complex combinations of hard drives.
The installer of Absolute Linux, for example, is text-only, and uses the LILO bootloader. If you didn’t know Linux existed in 1994, try Absolute to see what installing it looked like. Don’t worry, though – the look may be ugly, it’s all keyboard and no mouse, and it takes more time than you might like to read through some panels, but there is little real difficulty involved. The hardware detection works fine and you can safely accept the default settings and answers to each question that you don’t understand immediately.
The…