Linux The Only Beginner Guide You Will Need

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So, You Want to Use Linux?

Maybe you’re tired of Windows. Maybe macOS doesn’t feel right anymore. Or maybe you just don’t like the idea of big tech watching everything you do. Whatever your reason, this guide will help you install your first Linux distro, explore the ecosystem, and actually understand what you’re doing.

Which Distro To Pick?

Yeah… this is where everyone gets stuck.

You’ll hear things like:

  • “You should use Mint”
  • “No use Fedora”
  • “I use Arch btw”

And suddenly you’re 20 YouTube videos deep and more confused than when you started.

I’m not gonna just tell you to pick a “beginner distro” and move on. That’s how people end up distro-hopping forever.

Instead, let’s simplify things.

It’s (Mostly) All the Same

Here’s something many people won’t tell you: most Linux distros aren’t that different.

A lot of them are built on top of a few core bases:

  • Ubuntu → based on Debian
  • Linux Mint → based on Ubuntu (and Debian)
  • Manjaro → based on Arch
  • Nobara → based on Fedora

For personal desktop use, things usually boil down to three major families:
Debian, Arch, and Fedora.

So what’s actually different?

Mainly:

  • Desktop environment (the graphical interface)
  • Preinstalled software (Firefox, Steam, Python, etc.)
  • Kernel version
  • Default configurations

That’s it.

Many reviewers judge distros based on appearance—but you can change that easily. A distro is more about decisions made for you.

Preconfigured distros can be great—I personally use CachyOS, and it does a lot out of the box. But if you don’t understand those choices, you may not know whether they actually suit you.

First, Learn to Make Your Own Choices

You could install multiple distros and try them all—but I don’t recommend it.

Instead:

  • Pick a minimal distro
  • Experiment with desktop environments and window managers
  • Build your own setup

This way, you actually learn how Linux works instead of just hopping between distros.

Debian, Fedora or Arch

As mentioned earlier, most desktop users end up choosing between:
Debian, Fedora, or Arch.

All of them use systemd (which is fine for most people—but that’s a topic for another day).

So how do you choose?

It comes down to just two things:

  • Package availability
  • Update frequency

Debian

  • Very stable
  • Huge repository (~70,000+ packages)
  • Packages are older

If you value reliability over new features, Debian is a solid choice.


Arch

  • Rolling release (always up to date)
  • Around 15,000 official packages
  • AUR adds 100,000+ community packages

However:

  • Less stable than Debian
  • AUR packages aren’t officially maintained
  • Can be tricky (though archinstall makes it easier)

Great if you want control and the latest software.


Fedora

  • Balanced approach
  • Newer packages, but not bleeding edge like Arch
  • Backed by Red Hat
  • Large repository (~80,000 packages)

My Personal Recommendation

I personally started with a manual Arch install(I had used Ubuntu and mint before). It was challenging, but it taught me a lot about Linux and made me comfortable with the command line.

I’d recommend trying it—but only if you’re willing to struggle a bit.

Otherwise, start with Fedora or Debian and work your way up.

You Will Run Into Problems

A lot of them.

  • Your sound might not work
  • Your monitor refresh rate might be wrong
  • Games might not launch

Fixing these issues could take:

  • 5 minutes
  • 5 hours
  • Or even 5 days

But every problem teaches you something. That’s the real value of using Linux.

Be patient.

Finally

After enough trial and error you will become confident enough to daily drive Linux and start seeing everyone else as inferior being (just kidding) and you won’t need any guide to tell you what to use.


Comments

2 responses to “Linux The Only Beginner Guide You Will Need”

  1. A very well-documented blog.
    Can you make blog on how to install Linux on devices for those who are really new at it?

    1. Thank you for your feedback I will think about it.

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