Posted on 03/21/2023 4:22:02 AM PDT by ShadowAce
If you’re new to the Linux world, you may find yourself overwhelmed by the sheer volume of distros available to you. On the surface, it may look like an endless maze that leads you through a bottomless rabbit hole. However, even the most avid distro hopper has a daily driver they eventually settle on. This guide aims to help you find your new home in Linux while making the experience as enjoyable as possible.
Before beginning your journey, you have to know what you want out of your system. This involves finding a balance between how you want to use the distro and what you can expect to accomplish with your machine. Although many Linux distros can help you “breathe new life” into older systems, it’s important to note that your machine will still limit what you can do with the operating system, regardless of the distro you choose to settle into.
You should not expect any Linux distro to be a magical pill that will solve your machine’s constraints. If all you have is 256 MB of DDR2 memory on your computer, you’re going to have to live with extremely limited functionality.
When you’re looking at what to aim for, it’s important to consider two things:
Given the varying rates of these two factors among several different groups of people and other things that could come into play when making a decision, we are making recommendations based on several broad groups:
If you’ve never touched a Linux system, you’re better off trying something that’s popular, highly supported, and an easy-to-use desktop environment.
If you’re coming from Windows, you would get along well with a distro that uses KDE Plasma, Cinnamon, or Xfce. They all come with a familiar-looking desktop layout with an application menu that sits on a panel at the bottom of the screen by default with persistent icons showing favorite applications and those that you currently have open.
If you’re coming from macOS, you’ll find distros featuring GNOME, COSMIC, and Pantheon to be the most familiar, each coming out of the box with a dock for your favorite applications, always within reach at the bottom of your screen.
Generally, you should be looking at systems that share a code base with Debian or Ubuntu. It’s no surprise that the majority of distros in our recommendations for beginners are based on these two.
Most, if not all, Linux applications support the Debian APT architecture, and the majority of guides written for Linux include commands that operate with the Debian APT package manager. All of these make it easy for any newcomer to get started.
If you go on a Linux forum asking for help, most people will reply with commands and instructions that work perfectly on these types of distros, and you’ll find this as well when you’re searching online for answers.
The Debian/Ubuntu world is always ready to receive beginners with open arms and has many ways to hold your hand while you get acquainted with Linux. You can also gain easy access to a very powerful package manager known as snap.
If you’re running a computer with 32 GB of high-speed dual-channel memory, an NVMe drive, and a CPU/GPU combo that lets you have carte blanche over everything you run, you do have some bleeding-edge options at your disposal.
For high-spec machines running the latest hardware, your experience in Linux will largely be determined by the kernel and repositories available to you. This is especially true when you’re gaming, as some very important features like Fsync and Esync that improve the performance of non-native games need to be up to date.
For people who want to squeeze every bit of performance out of powerful machines without a lot of headaches, the Arch world will be very attractive. Even though installing Arch is no simple chore, there are plenty of Arch-based distros that can set up your computer quickly and easily. Arch-based distros offer an immense catalog of applications from the official repositories, dwarfed by an even more gargantuan user repository (the AUR) containing the latest applications.
The only major caveat to using an Arch-based distro is that you may be stumped by minor stability issues. But what you get back from it in terms of sheer performance and flexibility usually compensates generously for the small bugs that occasionally appear in some applications.
It might be instinctive to install Windows on a computer for your elderly relatives and for those who have little else to do than browse the Web and write the occasional email. However, you may be surprised to find that Windows is not really that easy to use (like regular updates breaking the system), but there are variants of Linux that are far easier for them to use and offer far fewer opportunities to damage the system.
When it comes to the choice of distro, everything mentioned in the section for those who are new to Linux applies here, with a few minor changes:
Besides distro choice, it’s very important to make sure that other parts of the environment (applications, browser extensions, etc.) that the person operates in are sufficiently prepared for ease of use and accessibility.
If you’re a developer, you may find yourself becoming more selective depending on your niche. If you’re looking to make the most out of your development experience in Linux, distro choice is about as important as what code editor or IDE you use.
When it comes to which codebase you should choose, the world is your oyster. Distro recommendations for the avid developer range all the way from Debian to Arch Linux, depending on your personal requirements.
It’s also worth mentioning that you would also benefit from going on a journey to learn how Linux works as an operating system. If you have the stomach for it, check out Linux From Scratch to learn more.
If you’re struggling to find the RAM to spare for anything, you will find most popular distros to be a bit heavy. Even some distros that advertise themselves as “lightweight” have the look and feel of something light but don’t generally do much to truly slim down the system’s overhead.
To truly choose a slim distro for Linux, it has to either come with or allow for the installation of an appropriate window manager or desktop environment. Given these criteria, you can be as creative as you want with your choices.
For the lightest experience possible, ditch the idea of using a desktop and just opt for a window manager like bspwm. Be warned that you’ll need to get very comfortable with the terminal, but once you do, you’ll notice that you can do just about anything a fully-featured desktop Linux distro can offer!
If you don’t quite have the stomach to go commando with a window manager, choose a feather-light desktop environment like LXQt or MATE. They may look dated and difficult to navigate, but they’re designed to work in very restricted environments, like old machines with severely limited resources.
Most distros will include these desktop environments. Once you install them, just select them before you log in to make the switch.
Every developer has a vision of what their ideal system looks like. When you have an open-source community, you’ll often find that software tends to fork in multiple directions, many times leading to innovative pressure in different directions. As chaotic as it may look, it also gives you the flexibility to choose something that ideally fits your particular scenario. People have been getting Linux to run on several different platforms for decades. This is what came out of all that effort.
So-called “security-oriented” distros are often hardened for particular niche use cases but won’t often make a difference on the consumer level. Any Linux distro will be as secure as you allow it to be. If you plan to run SSH, for example, learn how to secure your SSH properly before you dive head-first into trying to run your own home server!
Absolutely! Every Linux distro mentioned here will run a live version of itself on a bootable USB thumb drive (which is the medium you should be using to install distros anyway). This lets you “try it before you install.”
I started off with Zorin because Winblows kept slooowing down regardless of what tricks I pulled. It was a constant game of whack-a-mole so I switched. Not too painful. After several years Zorin is as fast as installed. No slowdown however I developed some glitches in updating browsers and such. This kept me from logging into several sites I needed (banking). I did a partition and am now running Mint on applications where I need an updated browser. I use Zorin day to day but switch over to Mint when needed.
BKMRK.
Every exposure helps.
I found this article to be interesting:
Choosing Linux: 2 Awesome Tools To Find Your Perfect Linux OS
Nov 27, 2018 - Jason Evangelho
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jasonevangelho/2018/11/27/choosing-linux-2-awesome-tools-to-find-your-perfect-linux-os/
1. Librehunt
I am a long time Linux user, but have a question about Linux systems that can be run on 12 volts or 24 volt powers sources.
Am thinking very hard about adding an to off grid computer as an option if needed. Will be moving soon to house at the farm. That was a long term redo job that is very near completion. Still waiting on an excavation company to put in another replacement septic tank.
So, Mini computers or Android options? Do they make any sense.
I’m not a gamer and am looking for a minimalist direction as fall back.
I always enjoy these.
What’s a distro. Just kidding. I want to bookmark this piece
well written and presented.
still completely amazed that this linux software museum piece level technology is still written about 30 years later let alone still a cool thing. Trapped in the 1980’s thinking (1991 officially from Bell Labs roots), it fetishizes complexity, brings pain from infinite directions, is poorly (POORLY) documented, and has endless opportunities to break or be customized intentionally or unintentionally.
but its Free (tm) and has a vibrant set of communities and is used by all of the Cloud Tech Lords at their roots.
It feels more like government handout cheese that everyone says they like but never tased anything better, so no one tries to make anything better.
pardon, timeline was off in above rant. 70’s technology at Bell Labs from Unix, parodying Multics from Bell and Howell, 1991 was Linus T’s own doing. Also Windows and Macs have been disasters at times as well.
Honeywell, not Bell and Howell. Putting laptop down.
Same here with Winders. I switched to Linux Mint many moons ago and never looked back. Stable as the rock of Gibraltar.
Have you looked at the Raspberry Pi options? Very low power requirements, yet able to run a decent desktop provided you don’t overdo it.
I used to “Distro Hop” looking for the “best” or “easiest” distributing to use- I learned that many are so similar that its probably best to settle on one distro as the main system, and maybe experiment with different distress on a different harddrive.
Most distros are quite similar, (while some are quite different) so I set out to find one that 8 liked the looks of, the stability of, and one that was easy to install and update programs on
Linux Mint Cinnamon filled the call.
I’ve experimented with others since landing on mint, but again, they were so similar thst I just keep with mint. Th3se days I don’t have a lot of time to mess around with things that “break”, so I don’t get into customizing the system like I used to.
I am about to kick Linux [Mint 20.3]. Frustration: a recent kernal or system update seems to kill internet/wifi connections.
The problem has shown up in LinuxMint forums, but the ‘solutions’ either don’t work or are too technical for us novice users.
I had a similar problem a couple of years ago, but the next update fixed it.
I finally timelined back to the initial Mint 20.3 and that seemed to correct the problem. Now, I don’t know whether to try to keep the system updated or ignore future updates.
I too has been sticking with Linux Mint Cinnamon for years now. It just works. I was drawn to it because at one time I was a certified Microsoft tech and didn’t really like using the command line. I’m more of GUI kinda user. There was still a learning curve and I still occasionally learn something new.
Bottom line is I can leave it running for a month or more before it tells me I should reboot it and it doesn’t bug me to update all the time like my dual-boot Win10 drive does. Thankfully I don’t need to boot into that drive all that often to do some photo editing. That and other software is not available for Linux which I think is monumentally stupid.
I run Pop!_OS on a System76 laptop. Pretty stable, and fast.
I dual boot too, and have the best of both worlds. I have it set to auto boot to Linux first, as that is my main os for all online activity, and only boot to windows when I run games, or need to use photoshop or my other windows only digitsl painting programs. I still have windows 7, so I don’t use it online much, but if i should get a virus I have macrium reflect backup of,the entire drive, so I can revert to previous condition before the virus if need be (but if it ever happens, I’ll likely go to revert and get a message that the backup is corrupted nowing my luck lol)
Im,a gui user too. I’ve had to command line certain things, but with my forgetfulness, It would tske me forever now to remember how to if the problems cropped up again. I have had to write down many command line things because I never remember how to so it when I need to. I wish though I had gotten into computers at an earlier age a d ,earned how to command line more, but I didn’t, so it’s gui for me
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