Yes, am new to Linux. Will need to run Windows apps.

Batsintheattic

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I have downloaded Ubuntu. Is this the correct - Version to start with? What else to I need to download?
I need to setup dual boot on the Windows machine also. Which, I may remove once Linux is up and running. Or, Am I able to link to it thru a virtual machine? Windows 7 on on it now.
Yes, I have skimmed some of the other posts on running Windows on Linux.
For now, just asking what OS and and apps I need to start with please.. Meanwhile, I will try to be reading the other posts.
Thanks...
 


I have downloaded Ubuntu. Is this the correct - Version to start with? What else to I need to download?
I need to setup dual boot on the Windows machine also. Which, I may remove once Linux is up and running. Or, Am I able to link to it thru a virtual machine? Windows 7 on on it now.
Yes, I have skimmed some of the other posts on running Windows on Linux.
For now, just asking what OS and and apps I need to start with please.. Meanwhile, I will try to be reading the other posts.
Thanks...
Hello @Batsintheattic
Welcome to the linux.org forum, It is possible to dual boot as long as you machine has enough disk space. Ubuntu is a good Distro but many people start with Linux Mint which is based on Ubuntu but does a lot of work for you. in any event burn it to a usb stick and try it out live first it will run without making any changes to your system until you install it. I suggest you try ubuntu and Mint and maybe a few other distros to see which one fits your style of operating the best. Then dual boot for a time until you get used to Linux which is different from windows there are no additional programs you will need to immediately download unlike windows Linux comes quite complete with browser, office software, etc. And any additional programs you may need will most likely be available in the Distro's software manager. This page maybe of help.
 
Do You Really Need Windows to Run Windows Apps?

If you have been putting off switching to Linux because of your Windows apps, it is time to revisit that assumption. The software landscape has shifted dramatically over the last several years, and the argument that keeps most people tethered to Windows is a lot weaker than it used to be.

The short version: most of your "Windows apps" are not Windows apps anymore.

The SaaS Revolution Changed the Rules

Microsoft moved Office to the browser. Adobe moved Creative Cloud to the browser. Salesforce, QuickBooks, your HR platform, your project management tool, your CRM — all of them live in a tab now. Office 365 runs identically in Firefox on Linux as it does in Edge on Windows. Same interface, same features, same keyboard shortcuts. Photoshop has a fully functional browser version. Acrobat runs online. Even Teams and Outlook are browser-based if you choose to use them that way.

The browser is the platform now. Chromium and Firefox are the new runtime environment, and both are first-class citizens on Linux. If it loads in a tab on Windows, it loads in a tab on Fedora, Ubuntu, Debian, or whatever distribution you favor. The operating system underneath has become largely irrelevant for this entire class of software.

So What Actually Requires Windows?

Be honest with yourself here. Walk through your actual workflow. Email? Browser. Spreadsheets? Browser. Document editing? Open it in Word Online or Google Docs — you do not need a local office suite at all for most workflows. If you do want one locally, LibreOffice handles Microsoft Office formats cleanly in current versions. The compatibility wars of a decade ago are over. PDF work? Browser or any number of native Linux tools. Video calls? Browser. Cloud storage? Browser or a sync client that has a Linux version.

The list of software that genuinely requires a Windows binary underneath it has shrunk considerably. What remains tends to fall into a few specific categories: niche vertical industry applications, some enterprise VPN or MDM clients that IT departments have not updated, certain CAD packages like SolidWorks that still have no native Linux port, and games.

Let us talk about games.

The Gaming Exception

Gaming is the last honest holdout, and it deserves a straight answer. Steam's Proton compatibility layer has transformed Linux gaming over the last few years. Thousands of titles run on Linux with zero configuration required, and a significant number of them run just as well as they do on Windows. Valve has invested heavily in this, and it shows.

But not all games run perfectly. Anti-cheat software remains a genuine problem. Some newer titles have rough edges under Proton. Frame rates on a handful of games still lag behind their Windows counterparts. These are real limitations and worth acknowledging.

Here is the question though: are you building a productivity machine or a gaming console? Because those are different conversations. If gaming is your primary use for a computer, Windows is still the safer choice and there is no reason to pretend otherwise. Stay on Windows, enjoy your games, no argument here.

But if you sit down to get work done — to write, to manage projects, to handle email, to run reports, to edit content — the game library on your operating system is irrelevant to that conversation entirely. A gaming library does not help you ship a report on deadline.

What Linux Does Better

Once you accept that your productivity workflow lives in a browser or in cross-platform applications, Linux starts looking like the superior platform for getting work done.

Package management on Linux is genuinely better. One command updates every piece of software on your system simultaneously. No hunting for installers, no clicking through wizards, no rebooting after every patch. Speaking of rebooting, Linux does not demand one every time a background service updates. Your system stays up.

There is no telemetry quietly phoning home in the background. There are no forced feature updates that rearrange your interface overnight. Linux runs well on older hardware, which means machines that Windows 11 refuses to support are perfectly viable Linux workstations. The operating system stays out of your way and lets you work.

The Bottom Line

The burden of proof has shifted. The question is no longer whether Linux can run your apps. The question is which of your apps actually require Windows anymore. For the average knowledge worker today, the honest answer is: fewer than you think, and probably fewer than you assumed when you last considered making the switch.

Take an afternoon and audit your actual workflow. Write down every application you use in a typical week. Then ask yourself which of those are browser-based, which have native Linux versions, and which genuinely require a Windows binary. You may be surprised how short that last list is.

Linux has not changed as much as the software industry has. The wall that kept most people on Windows was not really about the operating system. It was about application availability. That wall is mostly gone now. Whether you walk through the door is up to you.
 
I have downloaded Ubuntu. Is this the correct - Version to start with? What else to I need to download?
I need to setup dual boot on the Windows machine also. Which, I may remove once Linux is up and running. Or, Am I able to link to it thru a virtual machine? Windows 7 on on it now.
Yes, I have skimmed some of the other posts on running Windows on Linux.
For now, just asking what OS and and apps I need to start with please.. Meanwhile, I will try to be reading the other posts.
Thanks...
Hi! Welcome to the forums!
Dual boot is a good start, yes. Do that until you are comfortable staying on Linux for more and more, until everything is there and you don't need to switch no more.
Ubuntu? I recommend trying Linux Mint MATE Edition. This one is very conservative, and you will feel just like at home, after switching from Windows 7. Ubuntu is slow, have not very intuitive interface from Windows users perspective, you probably won't like it.

Yes, you can run your virtualized Win7 installation directly from Linux, but it's a bit technical.
Much easier to virtualize a new installation of Win7, or use WINE (program to run EXE files from Windows directly on your Linux).
 
Will need to run Windows apps
TL;DR
Don't attempt to run Windows apps

---

You switched to Linux with 1 leg, but your other leg is still on Windows, you're now basically out of step and no idea whether to step back or continue lol.
Switching to Linux is 1 step, 2nd step is to get familiar with Linux software and alternatives that replace Windows ecosystem.

If you want to use Windows software on Linux without exploring alternatives then you'll have trouble like many others who tried the same.

I have downloaded Ubuntu. Is this the correct - Version to start with?
No man, you didn't switch to Linux.
Suggested to read a bit about the new territory, it's called distro not version.

Good luck but I feel you need to sit in front of your computer for a few days reading some intros.
 


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