Bob the Unbeliever
Well-Known Member
It's a lot different than Linux in days of yore. More highly polished, and easy to use, for the most part. The hardest part is in partitioning the drive, but auto partitioning is an option if you only want Linux on the drive. Try Linux Mint, XFCE desktop. Fast and stable and easy to use. Avoid Debian, as it is mainlly command line for purists.
Ironically? Drive partitioning is Old Hat for me-- I learned PCs in 1981, where it was DOS 1.0 or nothing.
I expect I have forgotten more DOS than most modern folk have a clue of. There at the end? My DOS boot menus were complex, and 3 layers deep (and covered every contingency I had run into). Naturally, choice 1, was the default, and if you did nothing, that would go-- you only ever had to pick, if you needed a Special Boot Option. *sigh* Oh, the good old days of command line interface. How I do NOT miss them in the least!
The last time I tried, was about 6 months ago, and it was smooth enough-- except for the WiFi cards I had available-- none would work. Oh well.
I did try Mint, and several others? (forget-- they tend to blur into one). I don't think I tried XFCE. And I definitely didn't try Debian. I always opted for the "beginner" distros, so maybe that was my mistake?
None that I tried would enable wireless networking-- without FIRST going out to the interwebs to fetch something... and NONE would tell me what to fetch so I could use a different machine, and put it on a USB stick.
Frustration made me go, "jest fork it. STILL not ready for Prime Time, and likely never will"