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EuroNutellaMan, in Sell Me on Linux
@EuroNutellaMan@lemmy.world avatar

Others have given you some good advice but I’ll still give you my opinion because more data points is good.

First of all, as others said, it’s better perhaps if you switch your home computer first or try it out on a VM or dual-boot first as you learn how to use it rather than erasing Windows altogether at first. Regardless of your choice I’d recommend giving it a try still.

Affordability is not a concern at all, most Linux Distros are free and they’ll work perfectly fine, usually when you pay for distros you’re either paying for better tech support or to support the distro itself, and a lot of the software that’s on the repos is also free.

Your biggest concern probably would be re-learning the OS. Now, obviously Linux and windows work very differently, for example installing software on Linux is mainly done via an app-store or the terminal. As for graphics, shortcuts, etc, there’s two approaches here, which one is better depends on your preferences. You can either stick to something similiar to windows, so any distro that has Cinnamon, KDE plasma, or Xfce (you will have to move a few stuff and configure it a bit at the beginning) will do well, I’d recommend Linux Mint; or you can do something more different that will force you to learn something new and will tell you visually “Look, I’m not windows, I’m built different!” so something like GNOME (or customize the other DEs to something you like), personally I’m not a fan of GNOME but it works well for your use-case, as any DE will do, in this case I recommend Pop!_OS.

Both of my recommendetions use apt and are debian (through Ubuntu as the middledistro) derivatives btw. This is important because when you encounter a problem or a certain software not being in the repo it is good to look for sources closely related to your distro.

Linux can do everything you mentioned and more, however compatibility with M$ Word documents/etc can be a bit iffy. Personally I always used LibreOffice and aside from some minor annoyances never had issues with it and using .docx but I also don’t work at a professional environment that requires it to work perfectly. However you’re in luck as you can still use M$ office & other stuff from your browser if needed, tho I assume it will have less resources and will require an internet connection (this can be mitigated by working offline with LibreOffice, OpenOffice or any Office suite you like then copy-pasting it to M$ word or whatever), tho I wouldn’t know since I don’t use either and never planning on doing so. There’s also google docs.

Video types should work just fine especially common ones, VLC is a powerful tool. If you’re installing Mint make sure to install the media codecs at install.

Also I recommend learning the terminal, it may seem scary at first but it is easy, fast and will help you troubleshoot. Also accept that you will encounter problem, like in every system, and you’re expected to solve them yourself, this means you can spend a lot of time looking up stuff, learning to look at logs, etc. This will of course take time but it would take as much if not more time on windows too sometimes, on the bright side Linux tends to be a little better at telling you the problem if you know what to look for and also you almost never have to deal with an issue until the company fixes it, you can literally go and fix the code yourself if needs be. Anyways, on this end I recommend using a stable distribution (like the ones I mentioned), stick to the official repos as much as possible, and at install make a separate partition for your home folder, that way worst case scenario you can always just reinstall the OS (takes 15 mins) without losing your files*. Also, this goes for everything and I can’t stress it enough: MAKE FREQUENT BACKUPS, and better yet do them in multiple places: Proton Drive, external hard disk/USB, an other drive on your PC, whatever just have at least one, preferably 2+, place that isn’t your computer or its main drive be your backup space. This goes for Windows too and even though I assume you know it I will still say it because it’s extremely important and always overlooked.

*Unless you erase the partition by mistake or something.

P.S. also given the nature of your job, you might want to encrypt the hard disk (write the password somewhere and make sure to use a password specifically for it and one you can remember, password managers/generators don’t help here) and learn to use the gpg command when you need to encrypt and sign documents.

TrickDacy, in Sell Me on Linux
@TrickDacy@lemmy.world avatar

A lot of people lately have whined that Linux people are zealoted evangelists. You sure wouldn’t know that in this thread… Most popular jist of responses is “make sure its the right tool for the job first”

hollyberries, in Best lesser-known distribution/DE for low-end machines?
@hollyberries@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Puppy Linux is what I shove on old Atom netbooks

mfat,

Can I run regular browsers on Puppy? Or have to use their own apps only?

hollyberries,
@hollyberries@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I’m afraid I can’t answer that, It’s been quite a while. I think qutebrowser is the one that ships with it?

nyan,

Subject lines on their forum suggest Firefox and Chromium are both possible.

sour, in Basic fonts
@sour@kbin.social avatar

roboto because cute face

igalmarino, (edited ) in Basic fonts
@igalmarino@lemmy.ml avatar
  • inter for gnome
  • fira-mono for terminal
  • fira-code for coding
  • noto, liberation and dejavu for completion
just_another_person, in Audio Hardware Question from a Linux newbie

Disable auto-off power management features for the port you have the device plugged into. Try the ‘Tunables’ menu in the powertop utility if you want to temporarily test to see if it works. Easiest thing I can think of for a beginner.

mintycactus, in What is the easiest way to try all the DEs?
@mintycactus@lemmy.world avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • Static_Rocket, (edited )
    @Static_Rocket@lemmy.world avatar

    Just be a little careful here. There are distro live images that Ventoy does not support. They are rare but they do exist.

    funkajunk, in Basic fonts
    @funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

    I really like cascadia-code for my terminal (nerdfonts.com has the version with all the ligatures)

    I don’t do any graphic design or anything like that, so the fonts that come with any modern distro seem to do the trick - maybe I’d install ttf-ms-fonts for better compatibility when dealing with files across multiple operating systems.

    eah, in Sell Me on Linux

    Here's a good discussion on HN about this, including comments from lawyers.

    shapis, (edited ) in Basic fonts
    @shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

    These are the ones I install on every system:

    ttf-caladea 20200113-3

    ttf-carlito 20230509-1

    ttf-fira-code 6.2-2

    ttf-liberation 2.1.5-1

    ttf-linux-libertine-g 20120116-7

    adobe-source-sans-fonts 3.052-1

    adobe-source-serif-fonts 4.005-1

    noto-fonts-cjk 20230817-1

    noto-fonts-extra 1:23.11.1-1

    Currently trying otf-monaspace though and I quite like it.

    jollyrogue, in New Fedora Slimbook 14" joins the Fedora Slimbook 16" - Fedora Magazine

    Yay! No Nvidia this time.

    Cwilliams, (edited ) in Basic fonts

    The iA Writer fonts are quite nice, but super proprietary and not neccesary by any means

    link

    constate368, in This week in KDE: Wayland by default, de-framed Breeze, HDR games, rectangle screen recording

    Is there a way to restore scrollbars to their normal width?

    constate368, in This Threat to Free Software is Worse than I Thought...

    Nice clickbait self-promotion.

    folkrav, in Basic fonts

    Noto for desktop apps. Inter is nice too. Roboto was a long time favorite of mine too.

    Iosevka for monospace. Hack and Fira Code/Mono are great as well.

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