So ive use windows pretty much for everything and ive kinda had a enough of windows. i was thinking of trying linux on an old laptop that i just upgraded to 8gb of ram and im not sure wha tos to put on it. i was thinking something lightweight maybe ubuntu mate? i need somethign like windows that will allow me to game and do other things liek gaming maybe even streaming or reading? idk. also what are some neede dsoftware, browser so rthigs needed for linux. i com efrom a family who has never trie dlinux and hates it because its “the smar advanced coders os” somethign liek that.

anyways im a noob so go easy on me please als i may have ben linux distro hopping but i still feel lost.

  • BoofStroke@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Linux Mint Cinnamon is a good choice. Even as a sysadmin and DevOps engineer I use it on my workstation because it Just Works. It has good window management, settings management, file management and just stays out of the way. Flatpak is well integrated for things you may need that aren’t natively packaged, like discord.

  • Kimo@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    I would recommend that you check out Linux Mint. It is based on Ubuntu, but is in my experience easier to use out of the box.

    They have a MATE version on their website.

  • sibachian@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Zorin is designed to be a Windows replacement, but my personal recommendation is LinuxMint. Sure it’s not trying to be a carbon copy of Windows, but it’s designed to be easy to learn, stable, functional, and support pretty much everything from the get go (just not bleeding edge), with a readily available store that lets you download everything you need (that isn’t already included in the install).

  • alteredEnvoy@feddit.ch
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    1 year ago

    The similarity is really only superficial. You would have to learn about the OS one way or the other, even if some distro has Interfaces similar to Windows. You might need to find software alternatives for example, or be comfortable with package manager.

    For gaming, you want to checkout Steam w/ Proton and Heroic Game Launcher

  • bizdelnick@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    No.

    Linux is not Windows. Don’t try to make Windows from Linux. It can be visually similar, but it will never be the same. Don’t expect a seamless migration. Stay on Windows or be ready to learn new things.

  • xavier666@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    There are excellent suggestions in this thread. However, I want you to change your mindset. What you’re asking is like “I don’t want to drive my car. I’m sick of 4 wheelers. I want to ride this new thing called a motorbike. What are some good motorbikes? It should have AC and the safety and comfort of my previous car. Also are there any 4 seater bikes which is family friendly?”

    When you are shifting from one platform, please be prepared to make some changes in the way you normally operate. You can’t magically expect the new platform to be perfect when you have a decade of experience in the previous platform.

    I wish you all the best in your Linux journey.

  • SteelCorrelation@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    If you want a familiar Windows-like experience, the general consensus is that Mint and Zorin are the best for helping people transitioning. Lightweight-wise, Mint MATE, Xubuntu, or Lubuntu would work. Could install MATE, LXDE, or XFCE on Arch, too. Might be a Fedora spin, too, for some or all of those.

    If you want super lightweight, Void is awesome to play with, but you have to get it going yourself somewhat like old-school Arch. It’s definitely more advanced, but worth doing for the learning.

  • absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    Mint (cinnamon) is really nice, has a Windows like look and feel. Stable and friendly 👍

  • thepiguy@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I would always recommend mint. If you want domething which looks a lot similar then zorin does that really well, and it also has you pay if you want some stuff preinstalled so that part is like windows too. Keep in mind that Linux is not windows and it will never be 1:1.

    Gaming on Linux is pretty awesome if you use steam. It is painless in my experience.

    Linux is used by a lot of professional programmers who might also have gotten training during uni, but honestly, I don’t think that is needed anymore. It can be used by anyone who is willing to accept that Linux will never be 1:1 to windows.

    • BoofStroke@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Steam is great these days, even for windows games. Zen pinball and stray, for example, work flawlessly.

      • thepiguy@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I can 100% back this up. I never had any issues with any of the games I play. The most effort I put in was get dotnet for assetto corsa using protontricks, and that is pretty much the only game which required tweaking from me. I mostly play metroidvanias, and all of them work for me. I can also vouch for 99% of the games out there. Warframe and csgo also work really well.

  • Zxmon@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    just go with something like fedora. It’ll be easy enough and you can do almost anything through graphical user interfaces.

  • ugo@feddit.it
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    1 year ago

    People usually recommend Linux mint or some Ubuntu version. I recommend neither.

    Ubuntu is a proprietary-solution-ridden piece of hot garbage that tries to hinders what you do at any chance. I use it daily for work, unfortunately.

    It’s been a few years since I tried mint. It looked good and felt nice for the first few hours, after that I don’t remember what happened, it was maybe lack of configurabilità or lack of support, but I noped out very quickly and I just remember that my thoughts were “never again”.

    I never tried it, but it looks like Pop!_OS might be the thing to look out for in this space.

    Besides that, know that Linux is different from windows starting from its very philosophy. Keep an open mind, it can be a confusing journey for a beginner (which is why I am holding back about telling you about the many possibilities).

    One thing to keep in mind is that some software that you were used to will not be available, and that you might need to look for alternatives. But as far as the things you mentioned go, these are my recommendations:

    • browser: Firefox
    • gaming: steam
    • streaming: OBS
  • TheButtonJustSpins@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    I highly recommend trying Manjaro. I haven’t moved past Windows 7, so I can’t compare doesn’t to Win 10/11, but it’s the only Linux distro I’ve found that was Close Enough ™ to Windows to make it possible for me to switch.

    Like any Linux, things aren’t going to Just Work ™ as often as in Windows, but this is the closest I’ve gotten.

    • Mininux@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I recommend NOT using Manjaro, they have many issues, most described here: https://manjarno.snorlax.sh/

      for someone who wants an arch-based distro without tinkering too much there are other alternatives like endeavourOs, and I think Garuda too.

      For someone who wants something that looks like windows, no need for Manjaro, just something with a desktop environment that looks like windows. I’d recommend Linux Mint, very simple to use (and for low end computers there is the XFCE edition), or distributions with KDE (fedora KDE, Kubuntu…) or maybe ZorinOS.

      edit: also nobara Linux (based on fedora)may be good for games, they have a version that kinda feels like windows

    • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      I’ve been using Manjaro for a couple of years now on my desktop (with an Nvidia GPU). Their package situation is not great. Updating the Linux kernel and Nvidia drivers is a process separate from pamac that you have to just know to do, or one day X will break and now you have to figure out how to fix it.

      On top of that, because they delay the release of non-aur repo packages for stability testing, but don’t delay aur, some aur packages will just break occasionally. I now manually install discord from their tar ball because of this.

      Because of these little unnecessary quirks that you just have to know how to work around, I can’t recommend it for new Linux users, and honestly don’t recommend it to seasoned users either. I’m trying out endeavor OS on my laptop now and I think that is what I would recommend; but possibly only for more seasoned users because it’s arch. Might be more stable if you install the linux-lts package and remove linux.