A newbie trying to install linux

Thesaintcraft

New Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2025
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Credits
21
Hi guys, i want to enter this world, but as i have no clue about distros and how im gonna use the OS and why, i came to you for help.

First of all, my computer is a

ASUS - ROG Zephyrus G14 14" OLED 3K 120Hz Gaming Laptop - AMD Ryzen 9 8945HS - 16GB LPDDR5X - NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 - 1TB SSD - Platinum White​


and i have Windows 11, so, my question is, Whats the best distro to begin?, and what would you recommend for the installation, dual boot or VM??
Thanks for your time
 


That will run any Linux distro. Most will say Mint and Fedora are best for new users.

As for your second question. How many hard drives do you have? If only one, I would go with a VM.
Putting Linux and windows together on the same hard drive... can be... challenging.
 
Welcome to Linux.org.

Before performing a fresh Linux install alongside of your Windows 11....I recommend trying a few Linux distro first.

Virtual Box has always worked for me when trying distros.

Give Linux Mint, MX Linux [based on Debian] and maybe Zorin a try.

Also do a search of pictures for the various desktop environments and see what they look like. My 3 favorite desktop environments are KDE, Mate and XFCE.

Once you know what you like than do your Linux install.

Enjoy the day.
Alex
 
Welcome
your machine is capable of running any Linux, it entirely depends on your usage
for daily use Mint 22 or lighter and a tad faster Mint LMDE, Ubuntu, or Peppermint, for more office base use MX- Linux, for slightly better security Parrot Home edition, for gaming it doesn't matter as you can install all the gaming apps to any Linux, as I said any will run on your kit with the possible exclusion of POP which is made for system 76 kit, if it doesn't install and run first time, it can be a pigs rear to get it to work
 
how im gonna use the OS and why,

Resolve this first.

You should know how you're going to use the OS and why you're choosing to use the OS.

For example:

"I'm going to use a desktop version of Linux to replace Windows because I want user-based security and to easily maintain the software I have installed."

Without purpose, there's no reason for you to change.
 
Most will say Mint and Fedora are best for new users.
Mint - yes, but Fedora? I don't think it's a good option for a newbie.

Mint and Ubuntu are the best options for beginners.
 
Hello @Thesaintcraft
Welcome to the Linux.org forum, enjoy!
Your question get asked a lot by people coming from Windows.
I always recommend downloading and try several Linux distros on live usbs and see how they play with your hardware and personal tastes. I would start with Mint ,MX, ubuntu and others. In the end you will have to choose the one that fits your style of work and play. Good luck in you search.
 
Mint - yes, but Fedora? I don't think it's a good option for a newbie.

Mint and Ubuntu are the best options for beginners.

Fedora is great for beginners. I see no advantage to Mint over it.
Ubuntu seems to be falling out of favor, due to snaps.
 
I always recommend downloading and try several Linux distros on live usbs and see how they play with your hardware and personal tastes.
There is a couple of hundreds Linux distros. How is a total newbie gonna choose several?

I would start with Mint ,MX, ubuntu and others. In the end you will have to choose the one that fits your style

They are all Debian-based and will work more or less the same. If you want to try truly different distros then go for Mint, Arch, Fedora, Gentoo, Slackware, OpenSUSE, Puppy... I don't think this is a route a total newbie should choose
 
The main one is the installer.

Just as easy, if not easier than Mint. Redhat, Oracle, Rocky, Scientific, AlmaLinux, NST, Nobara, and AmazonLinux are are based on Fedora.

 
The main one is the installer.
So many people use Windows yet Windows installer is more complicated than most Linux installers.
At least if attempt to go beyond defaults to have more control such as manual partitioning.

So if a Windows user can't handle Linux installer something must be wrong with that user, perhaps they never reinstalled Windows I guess.
 
So many people use Windows yet Windows installer is more complicated than most Linux installers.
In 99.99% of cases Windows come pre-installed. The initial set up is not an installation.

Just as easy, if not easier than Mint.
One of the many discussions about problems with installer in Fedora:
When was the last time you tried to install Mint and Fedora one after another? Mint installer can be painfully slow, but is very easy and intuitive to use. Fedora's may be great for experienced users, but it's to complex for newbies. IMO, even Debian installer is not the best option for beginners.

So your debate about whether some distro is user friendly or not makes no sense and seems to support pushing specific distros.
But you have to recommend specific distros for beginners.
 
There is a couple of hundreds Linux distros. How is a total newbie gonna choose several?



They are all Debian-based and will work more or less the same. If you want to try truly different distros then go for Mint, Arch, Fedora, Gentoo, Slackware, OpenSUSE, Puppy... I don't think this is a route a total newbie should choose
Well to each their own. But They have to start somewhere. If you want to recommend the distro you would try.
This page may be of help in choosing also
 
When was the last time you tried to install Mint and Fedora one after another?

I wrote these two articles, a few days apart in Feb of this year.



When is the last time you did?

One of the many discussions about problems with installer in Fedora:


Someone has a problem. Anybody can find something wrong with some distro.
It's the same for every distro.

 
We've had all sorts of people (and I've not counted) start with Fedora successfully and without complaint.

I'm of the opinion that it's trivial to install and as 'user friendly' as any other distro. The only reason I'd 'argue' against it would be that a lot of software isn't pre-packaged in .rpm format while they are pre-packaged in .deb format. However, there are tools for this (see alien for example) and there are alternatives, including other package formats that are reasonably popular, tar balls, etc...

Now, to be clear about the above, I've never come across anything I needed that was difficult to install in Fedora.
 
Gentlemen [and our lady members] This thread is becoming an embarrassment, this thread is not the place to be Arguing what is best, what is easy to install and what's not some of us have been using Linux for over 20 years and have probably tried all base distributions and many of their offspring over the years, The question of what is the easiest or the best for beginners is a misnomer, What is best in the end, is a personal choice of what works best for us as individuals, and is not necessarily best for the newbie answering the question, and in the end makes all members look like a bunch of argumentative Barbary apes
Now, to be clear about the above, I've never come across anything I needed that was difficult to install in Fedora.
David you,I and several members have many years under our belts, it would be surprising if we could not install any distribution

My apologies to Admin and Mods for sounding off.
 
When is the last time you did?
Mint? Less than 24 hours ago. Took ages, but it was painless. All I needed to do was wait (I managed to finish a podcast episode and listen to some Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier). Finished around 2am. I still don't understand why it took so long. You can have a ready to work BunsenLabs in 20 min.

Fedora? 2-3 weeks ago. LXDE version. Gave up during partitioning/setting encryption. To confusing. Couldn't be bothered.

Complexity of the installer is one thing, failed installation process is another. You can not compare these two. Even the easiest installer may fail, but that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about complexity of the installation proces. Don't forget that there is a big chance the person trying Linux has never installed any OS.
 
Last edited by a moderator:


Follow Linux.org

Members online


Top