>>6756842>want into linuxFind
>>>/g/lern to --
>>>/g/catalogCTRL-F for "linux"
== profit
There is always a /fglt/ - Friendly GNU/Linux Thread
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>>>/g/57455336And lurk/post/lern to archive for previous threads.
Also, /g/entoomen start up several linux threads a day, some of which aren't entirely shitposting. So, keep an eye out for those and lurk/post/lern with other anons in those.
The sticky will take you to the wiki,
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>>>/g/51971506Also a great resource with all sorts of basics to get you started.
There are a number of linux distros recommended for n000bs in the info I pointed you at above, but also consider SOLUS:
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https://solus-project.com/It's recently become quite mature and has some exciting capabilities & desktop environment all designed to be relatively n00b-friendly.
Relatively.
It will depend upon your general tech aptitude and if you have any linux experience at all .. so it might also be a better second try at linux after something like Ubuntu or openSUSE. Each distro (distribution package) has its own community and support, so find the homepage for whichever distro(s) you attempt and look for their forums and wikis to get started.
One of my rule-of-thumbs these days: if a distro has a good description of how to acquire their installation ISO and mount it to a USB drive for installation, you're probably working with a reasonably user-friendly community/distro.
Early on, learn the difference between linux the operating system and the desktop environment installed on top of your linux distro. You can install a linux distro of choice, and then install one or more desktop environments for your GUI user-experience. For example, you could install the debian distro and the XFCE and MATE and LXDE desktop environments, then switch to whichever desktop fits your needs & comfort level.