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Me too! Just replaced my eight year old (and bear to crap) Chromebook with a corporate hand-me-down laptop that I ~~stole~~ got when they ordered new laptops! Just played around with both Mint and Ubuntu for a couple weeks and I've seriously loved it.
Retired corporate laptops ftw! I replaced some machines at my house with a pair of still-capable, well-built business-class Dell laptops for ~$80 each (via local classified ad). Running Bazzite on em.
Awesome! Good luck on your journey as well.
One of us! One of us!
gooble gobble.
I hope you find it a suitable replacement, I haven't used Windows in years thanks to Linux.
My advice, the good documentation on parts of Linux is quite literal it's best not to skim over sections. Sometimes the authors choice of words will infer answers to questions you might have.
A bit of competency in the shell/command line will go a long way, being able to view hardware (lsblk, lspci) mount drives, traverse the filesystem (ls, cp, mv, chmod etc) and a few of the basic commands for example
This should give you the ability to:
-
Back up all your important data from a live environment in the event that your distro is completely borked before reformatting
-
Gives you solid foundations to learn more in-depth parts of Linux if needed, access to internal documentation (man pages etc) from the shell itself is useful too.
Don't be afraid to dive in, it's hard to break things learning the basics if you're not root.
I am looking forward to getting more comfortable in terminal. At the very least, I know how to navigate around the file system, use SSH, and some other basic stuff. I find it hard to retain this info unless I'm learning it for a specific need/purpose, so I'll probably slowly pick it up in a random order as I have problems to solve.
You should check out the tldr
program. It's a community-driven quick reference tool that lists common practical examples for commands.
Ooh, thanks!
Welcome aboard!
Linux has it's tradeoffs, you must accept that sometimes, in some cases, you may get somewhat inconvenienced, but in exchange, your computer is truly yours now, with time you learn to deeply appreciate that, also, people who develop desktop, usually want to do it so people who are normal, can use it, I'm not a technical person and have never had a problem I couldn't fix, you just need to keep trying!... or find your way around it, contrary to popular beliefs, a big chunk of the Linux community is eager to help new people, for sure there are people who are elitists and gatekeepers, but are a loud, obnoxious minority.
Enjoy Linux!
Thanks! I think I'm willing to make that tradeoff. I also wouldn't consider myself techy (as in, not a tech professional or anything), but I am pretty confident in my ability to google and figure stuff out.
I've even run into my first issue now: It turns out that Realtek wifi USB devices don't play well with Linux.
but I am pretty confident in my ability to google and figure stuff out
Looks like you have a career in IT lined up!
To save yourself some headache on the wifi front, I recommend - at least for non-Laptops - getting a repeater and hooking your computer up via Ethernet cable. Yes, WiFi does work, but it can be a major PITA.
Googling is all you need (maybe change the search engine for a more privacy respecting one, like brave search or kagi, but still the same)
Congratulations. One of us, one of us, one of us.
Penguins together strong?
Become untariffable
This cracks me up, why is there a bunch separated from the rest?
Those are the people on the Hannah Montana distro.
Welcome to Linux, here's your thigh highs. We expect a post on UnixSocks soon.
Your Estrogen is in the mail.
can confirm, installed linux as a teenager and became a trans woman as an adult - the programming socks work π
This, but GrapheneOS
I recently discovered that GrapheneOS users can use Curve Pay for mobile NFC payments in the EEA
Finally a good use of bullying.
My biggest hangup (so far) is modding games.
Nexus is built for Windows. CDPR's RedMod is too.
It's probably not that big a deal. I'm just shit at all this stuff. I'm not a coder. I don't even know what the fuck sudo means. But I have a very loose grasp on using it. With a moderate amount of help from the internet. Usually.
I just game on windows to be honest. For that it's not bad. I do a ton of VR and the Linux support for that is minimal anyway.
Nexus is building a new version of its app, and the new one has Linux support (native app).
It's not yet a full replacement, and at the moment only supports a few select games, but eventually it'll expand to the full catalogue.
Glad you decided to give it a try. It really shines on older hardware and really shows how much bloat windows actually has. I've been using Linux since the 90s, it's incredible how far it's come. Show us your socks. Especially in relation to gaming in the last few years, there's almost no reason to deal with microsoft any longer!
The bloat is real! I really thought this old PC was just chugging along because of the hardware, but it seems perfectly content to run Linux.
Ignore that this is from Lunduke, but you might like this rice.
https://lcarsde.github.io/installation.html
https://lunduke.substack.com/p/make-linux-look-like-star-trek-lcars
Ignore that this is from Lunduke,
who? why?
One of those people who used to make Linux related content and then became an anti woke grifter
Now its time to convince Stamets to switch, too. Pray that he will not kill me π
Congrats tho, which distro did you choose?
I mostly use Linux but I dual-boot windows just for VR and every time I have to use windows it feels sluggish in comparison