Hi guys, I have a question if you would be so kind. I’m a professional developer looking to finally make a semi break into Linux.

My daily driver is a Legion 5 / 6800H with 3070ti 32GB and I have been running Linux Mint in a virtual box now for a few weeks.

I can’t make a 100% transition over to Linux due to the nature of my work but I could be running at round 80-90% of my work via a Linux OS.

With the above said, I’m finally going to install a dual boot instance today. Is Mint a good starting point? Anyone else have experience with Mint and Legion or would you recommend I start somewhere else? (I have heared many people mention POP OS).

Essentially I want something I can jump head first into and just make a start familiarising myself.

I’m trying to regain some control over my data and a jump to Lemmy and a Jump away from Windows feels like a solid start !

Thank you and keep rocking…

  • kylian0087@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Linux mint is a great way to start. Most distros based on debian are. Their is a abundance of information and community support with these distros. Personally i Like OpenSuse but even though it is a amazing all round distro. It is more of a niche and their for i can not recommend it to a new user, intermediate i can absolutely recommend it.

    About VMs Why not flip it around and use a Windows VM? personally I prefer it over dual booting if possible. no breaking boot loader when windows updates and you can snapshot windows which can come in handy. make a share between to 2 and you can move files from the VM to the host

    • zhenbo_endle@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I prefer Windows as VM guest too. However, it depends on OP’s need. Some apps may not perform good in VM

  • zhenbo_endle@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Many distro provide LiveCD. How about have a try first? You can test if the basic functions and the drivers included in the system work well on your laptop

  • Lengsel@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    For your hardware setup, I would suggest prioritizing good nVidia driver support over everything. A few distributions do not make the nVidia driver natively available for installation. I expect your Ryzen to be natively supported with 6.1 or 6.2 kernel, but test to see who has the latest nVidia driver to install and thrn decide from there.

  • Communist@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    What you need to ask yourself, is how deep you want to go

    Do you want a DIY distro so that you can fully understand the inner workings of everything? I’d say go with arch

    Do you want something that just works out of the box? Mint is great, so is fedora, and many others

    But I’ve found that nothing beats the comfort of a fully setup arch for me.

    • oranges@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Thank you !

      At the moment I want it out of the box and just work. I want to see natively how much of my workflow I can actually migrate across. I am however a brute in my day job and have no doubt that once I’m relatively comfortable with some form of Linux I will stretch it and eventually head somewhere I can fully customise like Arch.

      I’m semi Linux literate as I manage a number of web servers so I understand the absolute basics. No more, no less :)

      • Communist@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Please feel free to message me on matrix if you have any questions, I love helping people with linux.

        • oranges@lemmy.mlOP
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          1 year ago

          Thanks so much ! I really appreciate it… I have literally just hit the install button so no going back now :)

          • Communist@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            Enjoy, although do note, linux mint is an intentionally out of date distribution, which may make the wayland experience suboptimal, I’d stick to x11 until that situation is sorted, unless you’re on a rolling release bleeding edge distro like arch, it might not be very comfy.