I’ve wanted to go over to Linux for a long time but I have no idea how to go about it. I hear about incompatibility problems with hardware and all the different options for different Linux OS’s and that’s it, I forget about it for a while to avoid the headache.
So where do I start? I don’t even know how to choose hardware or what to look for. The number of options with Linux makes things a little confusing.
And although others here have answered the question before, I’m unsure what I have to do to stay ‘safe’ on Linux. Are there extra steps or is it just the standard, don’t open dodgy links and turn off Java script in the PDF viewer kind of thing? Does Linux come with a trustworthy firewall/antivirus/malware detection? Is there a chance of Linux e.g. sending my passwords, etc, to someone or just letting someone into my harddrive? I hear that ‘open source’ means people can check the code but how do I know if someone has checked the code—I wouldn’t know what to look for myself.
I followed the Linux subreddit but the users the can be rather… enthusiastic, which is great, but I need something far more basic to get started lol.
Is there a good step-by-step guide somewhere? Or can anyone give me some pointers/tips/advice?
I mainly browse, type, and read pdfs and other text files. No gaming, although I wouldn’t be opposed to it. No need to be mobile; laptops are terrible for my back so I always use an external monitor, anyway, so I won’t be using it ‘on the go’.
Edit: Thanks for all the advice. I got a machine up and running from a bootable USB.
Any others who read the comments here because they’re interested in trying out Linux – if you have Windows installed and want to keep it on your HDD/SSD, partition your drive within Windows. Then boot from the USB. You can partition your drive (and keep Windows) from the bootable USB but it’s a bit more complicated and it makes it harder to create a swap partition and a storage partition. I had to go back and forth a few times to figure this out.
Technically, you will “disturb” the current installation. But in practice it’s just piling all of the useful data together and freeing up a specific section of the disk for the other OS.
https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/how-to-dual-boot-windows-10-and-ubuntu-linux-dual-booting-tutorial/ This one should give you an overview on how it’s done. And contrary to my initial belief, you can do that from windows itself, you don’t even have to boot from the live usb for that.
Everything in that paragraph after the question also makes sense.
I’m talking storage. Swap is used as extra slower RAM if the physical RAM is not enough. And it’s also used for hibernation, where the system will dump everything from RAM into it before hibernating. The boot section is also very small. Mine is 1gb and I was annoyed because I thought it was too much.
This is my setup. 1gb bootloader, 100gb ubuntu, 16gb swap, 210gb windows, everything else is linux storage.
The bootloader is needed if it’s a linux only installation as well, I believe. They all live as different partitions.
I’m not the biggest expert here, so there’s room for criticism from other to the things I say, and maybe my knowledge is a bit rough at the edges for this stuff.
If you want a practical step to play with it, just pick any distro and create a liveusb, check how it works with your computer, check the network, audio input/output, camera, keyboard functions. If it all works, you can consider making storage space and installing it.
Thanks for this detail. I’m going to have a play around when I get the chance. This is all very helpful and I can see the advantages of using partitions like this.