See title. I’m considering to shift to Linux and maybe e/OS (coming from Macintosh and iPhone). I don’t know where to begin, so have an infodump (please do not sudo rm -rf /* this post, just redirect me elsewhere if that’s needed). TL:DR; below.


I’m a “beginner” in the sense that I haven’t worked with Linux before. I’m a casual user in that I mostly use my laptop for browsing, mail, gaming. I want to learn to get away from Big Tech, though, and hopefully manage to selfhost someday.

I want to take my privacy more seriously, though, and I’m familiar with some FOSS software (LibreOffice, GIMP, VLC, Signal, etc.). I’m also not a digibete à la “grandma doesn’t know what the red X” does, or not knowing how to troubleshoot using wikis. Compared to the median Linux user, I have a lot to learn, though.

I know some basics (what is a terminal, what’s a kernel), but not what a shell is, nor how to configurate an IP address. So I think I’m comparable to an average Sally on this. I’m open to learning more about all that though!


Did a bit of research and currently, I’m considering to choose between Fedora and OpenSUSE, but I’m open to other suggestions. I’ve heard Mint is good for beginners, but the GUI seems more Windows-oriented, and Mint also contains proprietary elements, and I’m not exactly a fan of stuff being locked down. I like MacOS-like interfaces, but customisation of the interface is also a big thing for me, but I presume this shouldn’t be an issue.

So, my questions are:

1) When Linux users talk about distrohopping - how do ye do that, converting from one OS to another?
I see it mentioned often and it sounds like it’s really easy to do from one Linux distro to another. Just straight up plug in a USB stick with the new distro, have a menu say “Do you want to replace this distro with this, or just run parallel”, and then follow?

2) How do I make the transition from Macintosh to a Linux OS?
For preparation, I could put everything from iCloud onto the device itself, and then back it up, but how do I do the actual steps?

3) What distro should I start with?
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed, Fedora Linux, or something else?
My priorities are that:
a) it’s privacy friendly and has good security (regular-ish updates too),
b) it’s friendly for the level of beginner that I am,
c) its interface is highly customisable (a Mac look with a twist would be my ideal)
d) it works with gaming, and still adheres to FOSS principles

4) For phones, what would be the best option?
I mostly care about privacy, independence from big tech, and ethics. I know GrapheneOS would be the best, but they only work on Google Pixels, and I strongly dislike the idea of depending on Google. Fairphone with e/OS is one I’ve my eyes on currently; would that work?

5) Keeping devices & laptop question
My laptop is 9 years old (phone is 5 years old). Should I keep them both, or would it be more worthwhile to switch over to new devices? If so, would a laptop from Slimbook or Starlab be a good option? I wholly oppose American stuff, prefer European the and like, the rest I’m indifferent about.


TL:DR; buncha questions about starting with linux, see boldened questions.

  • Limerance@piefed.social
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    19 hours ago

    Make real backups. Ideally make two or more

    • a full disk backup with SuperSuper
    • A Time Machine Backup on an external drive

    The likelihood of making your machine unusable for a while is non negligible.

    Mac

    If you want to dual boot with macOS, do some research. Boot loaders and EFI can be tricky.

    Holding alt after pressing the power button gives you the option to choose the drive to boot from. Holding cmd + R after pressing the power button allows booting into recovery mode. It allows you to partition and format your internal drive and reinstall macOS.

    You can install a newer version of macOS than is officially supported using OpenCore Legacy Patcher.

    FOSS principles

    Intel Macs often have Broadcom WiFi chips, that need proprietary software to work. As a noob, you should got with a distro that makes it easy to install these or does it automatically for you.

    You likely also want to play some video files, so you will need nonfree stuff.

    Distro hopping

    Install to an external drive or Virtual Machine. You can do that on your existing macOS with VirtualBox for example.

    similar to Windows, macOS, customizable

    Even the desktop environments, who claim to be macOS like (Endeavour, GNOME), have at best a superficial similarity. Don’t expect a macOS replacement. All desktop environments are different from macOS.

    beginner distro

    Fedora and SuSE are not beginner friendly. Lots of Linux distros use the same marketing terms of easy to use, powerful, efficient, etc.

    Start with Ubuntu or something based on Ubuntu like Mint.

    Cinnamon, KDE, and Gnome are all good desktop environments for beginners.