this post was submitted on 08 Aug 2024
14 points (93.8% liked)

linux4noobs

1357 readers
1 users here now

linux4noobs


Noob Friendly, Expert Enabling

Whether you're a seasoned pro or the noobiest of noobs, you've found the right place for Linux support and information. With a dedication to supporting free and open source software, this community aims to ensure Linux fits your needs and works for you. From troubleshooting to tutorials, practical tips, news and more, all aspects of Linux are warmly welcomed. Join a community of like-minded enthusiasts and professionals driving Linux's ongoing evolution.


Seeking Support?

Community Rules

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Long overdue, I know, but looking to start at least partially migrating and working with Dual boot, coming from Windows 10 (putting off 11 as much as possible)...

I have limited Linux experience, mostly in college several years back.

I work remotely with Windows software development, including Winforms, Asp.net, .net core, etc. Not sure what I need to best work with these, particularly Winforms. That may not even be possible, I know.

Looking for any general guidance/recommendations.

Long term, I'm interested in migrating as much as possible, outside of whatever I have to keep up for work... starting with dual boot options then moving towards linux as a primary driver. I have an old media server (also win10, not win11 compatable) not really doing much but running plex when I need it... would love to also eventually poke around with Home Assistant or similar, maybe some LLM tinkering etc.

If this isn't a good community for this, I apologize, and please point me to a better one if you know of one.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Recommendation from a guy who started on Arch (bad mistake). I never dabbled in Ubuntu/Mint/PopOS/whatever so I don't know how to recommend those, so take that very large grain of salt.

  • You want Windows/MacOS but the same
    • Debian/Devuan
      • Pick an image that comes with a default desktop environment of your choosing.
      • Once you figure out the package manager it's easy sailing.
        • Caveat emptor, haven't had to set up Nvidia on this.
  • You can read instructions and follow them
    • Void Linux
      • Nvidia is trivial to set up.
      • Like Arch, but stable.
      • No AUR, the official repositories are just good instead.
    • Alpine Linux
      • Uses musl libc.
        • Has no software because musl libc.
          • Flatpak and other runtimes can get around this, thankfully.
      • Busybox sucks, replace with coreutils immediately.
      • Install the docs metapackage if you want to have any clue what you're doing.
  • You want to learn, maybe after you already had some experience
    • OpenBSD
      • The best documentation on the planet.
      • Not Linux, but a lot of the stuff you learn here can be applied to Linux.
      • Try to avoid 3rd party utilities and instead rely on the base system as much as possible.
      • No modern Nvidia driver, not even nouveau.
        • Display should at the very least still work with the vga(4) or efifb(4) drivers, but you'll have no acceleration.
    • Gentoo
      • Don't go too hard on the useflags or kernel config unless you want to have a bad time.
      • Honestly should be in the previous category if it wasn't so easy to footgun yourself with one bad command or configuration.
        • This is where the learning part comes in
      • Stage 4 tarball is cheating.