Spyke

Idk where else to post this but I've finally kicked Windows for good and I'm SO EXCITED

I've also got the Linux Basics for Hackers book but it's at home while I'm on vacation.

I'm just really happy rn yall :) this install took some work, SecureBoot kept getting in the way and I'm not the most savvy person so there was a lot of Googling and trial and error in the way of getting here.

View original on lemmy.world
lemmy.world

Welcome! Don’t listen to anyone trying to shame you for your distro choice. The most important is that you didn’t choose windows.

120

No, no! Listen to the shamers! Change your distro eight times over the first month as you listen to them whine, and eventually return to the first one you chose, full of wisdom of why those other distros suck so you can tell the noobs who choose one of them first instead of your glorious choice!

60
lemmy.world

Thanks! I plan to experiment with others, but I wanted a nice smooth transition for my wife and I both, so Mint seemed like a great starting point.

42

Mint is rad. I currently use barebones Debian testing with a bunch of customized stuff, but I always keep a bootable Mint flash drive on my keychain. It's a very solid choice

13

I used Mint for almost its entire existence so far, but recently I've started main driving immutables, and gotta say the experience is even more user friendly. That's my current experimentation stage but, so far, it doesn't feel experimental at all, it just works out the box, no issues.

5

My boyfriend wanted Linux on his laptop and he's not tech savvy at all. I installed Mint for him and he's very happy with it, no complaints. It's a very good choice.

3

I’ve been daily driving mint for over a year now, gotta say, never been tempted by anything else. It really is solid and functional and easy to work with. The only issue I’ve ever had with the system was programs closing randomly, and turns out I was just running out of ram. Fixed that by adding more swap (using part of the hard drive as back up ram).

Having come from windows, it’s really nice to not have to search through 5 different settings menus, not to mention not having changes I made reverted at every update.

3

That’s awesome choice, even though I wouldn’t choose Mint for myself at that point.

It’s really nice you read on Linux, that will help you a lot if you decide to give Arch a try. Don’t bother putting it straight on your hardware. Experiment in VM first and commit to it if you feel confident and like it :)

2

If you have something to hide from The Glorious and Omnipotent Kim Jong Un, our beloved leader, you do not deserve to be a human. All hail our Dear Leader.

M’comrade…

13

I agree that’s why I don’t listen to all the hater’s who say my distro Choice of Android Tv is bad.

12
programming.dev

Your distro of choice is a good distro unless you chose anything other than TempleOS

6
iamahabreply
feddit.org

Thank God, I was afraid you would shame my Hannah Montana Linux

7

Mint's a pretty nice distro, all things considered. The only one I'd turn my nose up against is Manjaro, mostly because of their leadership's reputation as clowns.

2
lemmy.ml

Quick tip: forgot how to use a command? Use man commandname to see a short manual page for that command.

Forgot sudo on your command? !! refers to the previously typed command, so you can simply type sudo !! to fix it.

56

I keep forgetting that one! Thanks! I always use up arrow and then waste time getting the cursor back with maybe the home key or ctrl+ left-arrow LOL

4

Also, don't forget manuals have pages lol. I forget how many there are. 99% of the time you just need page 1.

2

"I'm just really happy rn yall" - be careful with that rn command if you're anywhere near Arch, wouldn't want all your happy uninstalled! Seriously though, good for you! Welcome to freedom.

36

The newest version there is 6th edition and has 90 more pages that he latest print copy of 2nd edition. Anyone know if there's a plan to start printing a copy that's less than 10 years old?

1

Good job, welcome to the free world of tech. Installing is often the hardest part.

Next lesson: forget about downloading installer from the browser, check out the software center or learn package manager commands, that's the first new thing about Linux.

30
lemmy.ml

You'll probably be making lots of changes to your computer over the next couple of weeks, so it's a good idea to use TimeShift to make system snapshots. (It works like System Restore in Windows). It can even rescue an unbootable system. Just boot from your Linux Live CD / flash drive and you can run TimeShift from that.

22
lemmy.ca

Whoah... wish I knew about this when I was setting up my raspberry pi. Got a brand new computer on the way (well half of it is here already) so this might come in handy... thanks!

6
abcdqfrreply
lemmy.world

I highly recommend taking the time to really look into btrfs for anyone interested in utilizing timeshift. There is no going back.

3
lemmy.zip

Be mindful that Linux changes faster than a lot of books. I would stick to online documentation.

18

Those books were published in 2019 and 2021. They'll still be mostly accurate a decade from now. Open-source developers usually try not to introduce breaking changes to mature software unless absolutely necessary.

9

Books will teach the essentials: my core UNIX knowledge comes from an SVR4 book I read in the late 2000s (a decade or more after it was relevant) and it's still applicable today

8

Documentation is not the proper place for an absolute beginner to learn (unless it explicitly has tutorials, and even then they're not always great).

3

Welcome! I have been using Mint many years now its a gold standard distro you made a solid choice.

18

I'm about to repartition and reinstall everything. I'm very fucking tempted to drop this dual boot nonsense now that I have a good idea of what little I'd be losing.

14
lemmy.world

I screwed up my dual boot a year ago and it was happiest mistake of my life. Forced me to learn linux, and now I feel like I live in the matrix with all my bright green terminals on i3.

11
Victorreply
lemmy.world

I remember when I used green on black lol. Good times at uni. Nowadays I even use light mode in the daytime... I get too sleepy with dark mode in the daytime lol. Guess I'm getting old.

6

You don't need to reinstall. You could keep the old partition and format it and add it as a new volume while keeping the current installation.

If the windows volume is to the right of the Linux volume, you could also boot a live-usb and drop the windows partition and then extend the Linux partition then extend the Linux filesystem to cover all disk space. If it is to the left, you can do the same but you'd need to move the partition and reinstall the bootloader as well.

A backup would be mandatory If you don't really know what you would be doing with the above, however. But if you do, it's a lot easier and faster than to rebuild everything from scratch.

8

You picked some really good books to get started with! Lot of online help these days!

14

Yeah honestly once I got past my BIOS problems everything else has been a breeze. Driver install and updates all went flawlessly. I played around with Linux a tiny bit in decades past (usually just to fix something and get back to Windows), so I was a little concerned about it at first, but, as they say... shit just works 🤷‍♂️

6
lemmy.ml

The Linux Command Line book opened up a lot to me. How Linux Works is very good, but the command line is so essential, and that book gives you some great starting knowledge like aliases and shell scripting.

Especially aliases. Take note of aliases, when you start using aliases it can change your world once you realize how much you can accomplish with what essentially are one line programs you wrote for you own personal needs.

Welcome beyond the pale, friend. You've made it to the other side. Only freedom awaits, should you have the determination to work for it.

13
Classyreply
sh.itjust.works

I added a line to my /etc/bash.bashrc:

alias shutup="sudo pacman -Syu --noconfirm && poweroff"

So when I tell my command line to shut up, it auto updates and shuts down

6

Welcome to the club! Mint is an excellent choice, especially from a beginner's perspective. Don't let that stop you from trying other things though if you get the temptation. Fedora and Arch are the two other 'families' I can think of to play with, though I've stuck with things in the Debian side of things myself.

13
lemm.ee

Honestly, I consider myself moderately tech savvy. But I also had issues with SecureBoot when installing Linux. It really doesn't help when every single BIOS has different settings and they all want to make everything as poorly worded and unintuitive as humanly possible.

"Oh, you want an on/off toggle for SecureBoot? Sorry, no. Let's just fuck with you until you either brick your motherboard or somehow manage to install Linux."

My congratulations! You've managed to get past the most difficult hurdle.

11

To be fair, writing technical documentation for this shit is possibly the most unpleasant job in the world. After 5 minutes I desperately want to fuck off and get high.

8
lemmy.world

Congratulations! It's really fun to learn something new. Don't let anyone distro shame you.

(Unless it's into installing Gentoo)

11

I like Mint quite a bit myself. Mint Cinnamon is my preferred "just put Linux on it" distro.

My comment was mostly tongue in cheek :-p

1

That Linux command line book is really, really good. I love how it actually explains the commands and why to use them instead of just being a copy of each commands help document or something.

Congrats on ditching Windows!

11
lemm.ee

If you want to mess with the command line, I recommend tldr. Anyone could do xkcd's tar challenge if they can run tldr tar first! (pretty sure it's in mint's apt repos)

10
kabireply
lemm.ee

not sure if arguing against tldr, or just trying to defuse a bomb

11

Successfully defusing a bomb!

..or was it -h 👀

(tldr is fire btw)

3
sh.itjust.works

Nice. I'm currently waiting on a "new" laptop, get off this old Core2 duo I'm typing on. Under $300 from a trusted ebay seller and I'll be in the right decade. Linux is awesome for using old hardware but my favorite part is the "free as in freedom" aspect.

If you do run into windows mandatory stuff it's not all that hard to run virtual machines now. I've been using VMWare player but on my incoming machine I'm going to give QEMU-KVM a shot. Move away from proprietary VMWare and onto free as in freedom software.

10
Valmondreply
lemmy.world

Oh my god. I had a E8400 when like WOW came out, fond memories.

So what kind of laptop are you getting?

Edit: I upgraded to the E8400 during the WoW aera, as WoW came out 2004 and the E8400 came out 2008. Still some time ago :-) !

3
rc__buggyreply
sh.itjust.works

Lenovo t480s 16GB/512GB

And I was just joking about this being a Core2, it's a i5-4xxx 4GB

2

Ah lol!

I got about that laptop (t490 256GB), it's really great.

2

ugh r u rly usin [distro i dont use] just go back to micro$haft luser

9

I reccomend trying TUI utilities to get better at Linux for example: btop, fastfetch, ranger, vim, and apt (also ignore anyone who tells you to sudo rm -rf /*)

9
lemmy.world

What’s your initial impressions of the How Linux Works book?

9
lemmy.world

Really clear and helpful! It's taken a lot of the intimidation away I think. I'd definitely recommend it to other noobs

7
lemmy.world

Have you tried gaming? I tried PopOs and now Mint like you, and Steam games do not detect my Nvidia card though I see it in Mint information preferences and I’ve tried many things.

3

Just a little last night, I installed TF2 and Caves of Qud and both ran fine OOB. I've got Proton on tap if I need it.

Hope you can find a solution!

2

Congratulations! Enjoy the journey! You'll look back in a few years and wonder how you ever managed with a Windows set up while you slip into the comfy-ness of your customized system.

9

Anyone have tips for someone wanting to do the same but have two hurdles?

  1. Need multi-org account support for Teams due to multiple contracts across different orgs. At the moment I could run Windows in a VM for it but then notifications are rough. An option is running teams in multiple browser profiles / tabs but this is also not entirely ideal (6-7 profiles/tabs just for teams is rough). Any clever ideas welcome, or someone who may have experience with Matrix bridges to accommodate this somehow? Does that work for adhoc calls?

  2. Speedy remote desktop. Parcel seems to be the closest in speed to RDP thus far, but it doesn't consistently transmit shortcut keys which makes development difficult. Any other suggestions, gladly welcome.

3. (no longer an issue) if you've seen my past comments, I used to seek an alternative to Fancy Zones, but my fix for this was to just get rid of my ultrawide and go back to multiple monitors. So this is no longer needed.

8

I would recommend making a new post since hijacking someone else's is kinda rude imho.

3

Welcome to the community.

I do have a question: Do you like your current desktop environment (Cinnamon)? Some newcomers complain that it looks quite dated (which I agree). If so, you could try out KDE Plasma or GNOME instead.

6

I have been using Kubuntu as a daily driver for almost 10 year now, and never regretted it. I had one Windows box for things like special cases (like dumb website forms that won't let me use Linux), Pearson Vue exams, and edge cases related to work, but it's on standby as a secondary system I RDP into. I am not a gamer, so I didn't need it for that. I saved so much money not having to buy hardware in the last decade or so.

Sadly, Windows 11 won't work on anything I have (TPM issues, too old), so I recently got a cheap Windows 11 laptop before the tariffs hit and I pay more for dumb Windows-only reasons.

Linux all the way, man. Gave me a career, a life, and my hardware back.

5

I went back and forth for about six years.

Then I began using Linux on a home NAS, then using the host GPU for virtualization, then proton... and when proton hit, that was basically.

Yep! Packing my shit! We're going to penguin land!

4
lemmy.ca

Way to go! Welcome to the club buddy! If you need help, don't be shy. You can DM me anytime and I'll do my best to help. :)

4

Congratulations Comrade! Good luck to you in your new world of free awesome software. I escaped Windows years ago and can only imagine how bad it's gotten.

4

did the same thing and Did a raid0 btrfs config on my old windows drive.

4
lemm.ee

I've got the same laptop and running mint. How is your wifi when you resume sleep or open your lid?

4

Wifi not resuming when coming out of suspended state. It's a common Linux Mint issue. I just have my laptop shut down on lid close. No sleep time out

2

Congrats! Made the switch finally early this year myself, after thinking about it for nearly twenty years. Hasn't been nearly as hard as I was worried it would be.

I will say that the "Linux Basics for Hackers" is a pretty disappointing book that really should just be called "Linux Basics", and spends too much time pandering with things like "cool" scripts that do nothing useful or wrap a simple command in a way that doesn't actually make it more useful or easier. It's also full of inaccuracies and just isn't very well written, and if you've gotten through much at all of How Linux Works, you're not likely to get anything out of it.

3

Different distros deal with securebot differently. If you try OpenSUSE, secureboot works: you will be asked to enroll your keys after the install reboot. And you will see the ooensuse-secureboot entry in the UEFI boot order list.

3

I love how under most Linux threads there is war and anarchie and many know-it-all, but under this? A New Penguin? Lets Embrace him in the best Community there is.

Nice Work Man

3
lemmy.zip

lucky for you, my laptop in its entirity is unsupported by the linux kernel (msi gf63 thin 9sc)

2

only as live system, with limited capabilities. i only run linux in virtual machine for now. don't buy msi gamer laptops

1
leminal.space

I've used Linux for 20 years and never picked up a book on it. Not that there's anything wrong with the books, but let's not give the impression that it's necessary.

0

When I bought a book on Linux, I followed it chapter by chapter then when I got to chapter 6 or something none of it matched my OS and I was lost again. It was really bad for a modern book.

I did learn a lot from the book, but quite discouraged after getting lost there.

About a year or 2 later I went full time in Linux after the windows Recall and their One drive was stealing all my files when it was disabled. I saw the sync icons all over my desktop with the computer idle. Last straw and I switched to Linux for good.

4
lemmy.today

The NoStarch books are excellent overviews for newbies to go beyond being "just a user" though. They're written in a very friendly and approachable manner. If you're enthusiastic about learning how the OS works and playing with commands, they're really good about that! I think it's cool OP is repping rhem. :)

If someone was like "Hey I wanted to try Linux!" and thought they needed to go through LPIC/LINUX+ doorstoppers or had manuals about the kernel or something, I'd be like "Woah there. Calm down." LOL

4

I hear ya. I use linux just fine but now and then I dicover a new trick or command and I'm like "holy shit it's a superpower". A good book could be gold.

5
sopuli.xyz

sudo right now -rf /

Edit: this was supposed to be a reply to a different comment

-9