Getting new home laptop. You obviously recommend this, it looks easy enough, can run over top windows I understand. Load from external every time or install and run on boot? I'm computer stupid for the most part. Are things downloaded on Linux available then only in that OS? Curiosity, not necessity.
Yeah, when you install it on a PC that already has windows you get an option to have what is called a "dual boot", meaning when you turn the PC on you'll be presented with an option to with OS to boot to, each will have it's own partition.
I honestly recommend not even doing that, just replace the whole thing (also an option), though a dual boot is interesting to just test it out, you can also just test out linux by booting up the installation media, it runs a "Live" version of it, completely functional with some preinstalled apps.
Linux will have to be on it's own partition, which will have to be on a different filesystem than windows(EXT4 usually), but you can mount any drive/partition within Linux(even if they're in the MS NTFS file system) and write/read files as normal, so files downloaded on linux will be available on windows and vice versa, you cannot access the Linux partition from Windows though.
When it comes to software you install though then yeah, Linux software will only run on Linux, you can run Windows stuff in Linux tough, using a compatibility layer called Wine, works pretty good with almost anything.
Though, unless you use very specific specialized software, you're bound to find open source stuff that runs natively on Linux to replace any and all applications you make use of on Windows
Np fren, send me a message in case you need help with anything else
I know it sounds like a bunch of nonsensical technical lingo, but the installers that come with most distributions nowadays (Mint included) make it really easy to set it up.
Like if you try installing it on a PC with windows, there'll be an option saying "install alongside windows" or something along those lines, you pick that, click next, and it does everything for you.
Yes you can browse all drives from either opsys if you want. You can partition your drive into three and have Linux on one, Win the other, and the remaining as storage. Tricky to know ahead of time how large to make the partitions, but linux will be the smallest of the three.
I concur. Other distros are fun to play with if one chooses to go down that rabbit hole. I prefer Debian myself, and build my system piece by piece, using XFCE as my WM. And then there's Gentoo...
Winaero Tweaker lets you disable telemetry with a simple toggle.
Thanks!
sure, it's fdisk c:\
kidding aside, so goddamn glad I switched to linux years ago.
#MeToo Arch ftw
I'm running the the arch-linux steamdeck OS on my gaming rig and never been happier with an OS.
Kek, this kind of stuff always reminds me of the little Johnny Droptables xkc comic...
There's always ShutUp10++ (free).
I think this might be what the OP was referring to. I had recently bookmarked it, and I assume I got the link from someone here.
https://www.oo-software.com/en/shutup10
How to get rid of MS spyware for good:
Best thing for everyone to do.
Getting new home laptop. You obviously recommend this, it looks easy enough, can run over top windows I understand. Load from external every time or install and run on boot? I'm computer stupid for the most part. Are things downloaded on Linux available then only in that OS? Curiosity, not necessity.
Yeah, when you install it on a PC that already has windows you get an option to have what is called a "dual boot", meaning when you turn the PC on you'll be presented with an option to with OS to boot to, each will have it's own partition.
I honestly recommend not even doing that, just replace the whole thing (also an option), though a dual boot is interesting to just test it out, you can also just test out linux by booting up the installation media, it runs a "Live" version of it, completely functional with some preinstalled apps.
Linux will have to be on it's own partition, which will have to be on a different filesystem than windows(EXT4 usually), but you can mount any drive/partition within Linux(even if they're in the MS NTFS file system) and write/read files as normal, so files downloaded on linux will be available on windows and vice versa, you cannot access the Linux partition from Windows though.
When it comes to software you install though then yeah, Linux software will only run on Linux, you can run Windows stuff in Linux tough, using a compatibility layer called Wine, works pretty good with almost anything.
Though, unless you use very specific specialized software, you're bound to find open source stuff that runs natively on Linux to replace any and all applications you make use of on Windows
Thanks. I'll run it live and play around to test it and see if it's something I can get used too. I appreciate the info.
Np fren, send me a message in case you need help with anything else
I know it sounds like a bunch of nonsensical technical lingo, but the installers that come with most distributions nowadays (Mint included) make it really easy to set it up.
Like if you try installing it on a PC with windows, there'll be an option saying "install alongside windows" or something along those lines, you pick that, click next, and it does everything for you.
Yes you can browse all drives from either opsys if you want. You can partition your drive into three and have Linux on one, Win the other, and the remaining as storage. Tricky to know ahead of time how large to make the partitions, but linux will be the smallest of the three.
Perfect. Thanks.
i like fedora, but mint isn't bad
Steam deck arch linux OS is pretty damn good on PC rails, very window-esque as well.
awesome. have to look into it at some point =)
I think mint is just way easier for windows converts to start using from the get go.
It just works, plus cinnamon is very windows-like
I concur. Other distros are fun to play with if one chooses to go down that rabbit hole. I prefer Debian myself, and build my system piece by piece, using XFCE as my WM. And then there's Gentoo...
Gentoo is a bit insane, I tried it once but couldn't get the thing to work, on a VM at least.
Funny thing was that I tried it because someone recommend it over Arch saying it was easier, I think they were just pulling my leg.
They definitely were kek. Arch at least has packages, whereas you have to compile everything for Gentoo, as you know...
that's fine. I got hooked on fedora during a college course (plasma ftw, though it's a bit resource-intensive on older systems =/ )