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48 points

Linux users can’t even agree on what distro is actually beginner friendly, so how am I supposed to pick one with any confidence?

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11 points
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Linux users can’t even agree […] so how am I supposed to pick one with any confidence?

Easy. You make a post like the OP, count the positive mentions of distros in the comments, and bam, you have your distro of choice. It’s called the Linux newbie roulette and works kind of like the magic hat in Harry Potter that sorts you into your house.

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9 points
  1. Find a distro, run into problems
  2. Ask for help
  3. Get asked why the fuck you chose that distro when it’s obviously for super brains
  4. Repeat
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8 points

@Default_Defect @Magnolia_ The best Distro for beginners is the one, a friend or family member can give support.

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4 points

I’m pretty sure I’m the only person in my circle who even knows what Linux is.

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5 points

You are on the path to be that family member or friend for someone else. Welcome.

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0 points

You are on the path to be that family member or friend for someone else.

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7 points
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I know its one of the strengths of Linux, but I can’t help but laugh that the response to “you can’t agree on one, how can I?” is for several people to suggest several distros.

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1 point
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what do you think about:. “you don’t need to choose one” and “you don’t need other people to choose for you” and “distro isn’t that important in many cases”

I can agree 100% on what distros I use for what types of computer. And I can agree 100% on what I’d have used now, if i were a beginner again.

But all i can recommend to a stranger is, backup all your stuff properly,

try a few out (v.m. or liveCD/Ventoy) and be prepared to change.
make sure to check application versions in the base software repository - for any programs where that matters to you. and ease of updating - if that matters to you. and check out some flatpak if you think that might be a useful way to get extra applications or in some cases up to date.

if in doubt, choose gentoo /s

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3 points

The solution is to not be cconfident and remain open minded. You can switch any time

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14 points

The thing is, I don’t care to distrohop and experiment with this or that. I just want to use my computer. Until I see a distro that can convince me that switching will be actually painless (not ‘long time linux user painless’, but ‘casual new user that does more than just web browse’ painless) I’ll just use windows.

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1 point

What would you need for convincing?

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2 points

That’s really depending on your use cases, for example if I want to install distro for my grandma use Mint, for a graphic guy (as in this example) use Arch or Fedora (or even OpenSUSE), etc.

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2 points

Linux is a niche. Picking any distro that isn’t the most popular is going one step deeper into a niche. A niche, within a niche.

Just use the most popular distro… Ubuntu

Problem solved.

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5 points
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Deleted by creator
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3 points

Ubuntu isn’t the most popular and hasn’t been for a while. It actually has a lot of issues new users are likely to run into, including lots of spurious error messages. Apparently the top 5 according to distro watch is: MX Linux, Mint, EndeavorOS, Debian, and Manjaro.

So essentially debian, arch and ubuntu derivatives.

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2 points

I’m sorry, I can’t believe that MX Linux and EndeavorOS are popular or recommended. I’ve never heard of those or seen any recommendations for that.

I’ve seen Mint recommended.

People pushing arch on newbies? Wtf?

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2 points

I fucking hate Ubuntu. Mostly because you’re right.

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