I bought my son a new Acer Nitro gaming laptop for Christmas, so suddenly had his older HP Ryzen 5 laptop spare. The copy of Windows 11 installed was playing up a bit (he messed it up with Minecraft mods) and I initially was going to reinstall it. But we have enough Windows PCs and Laptops to sink a ship, so I decided to put Linux Mint on it instead.
This PC is fairly up to date with an M2 HDD and with built in AMD Radeon Graphics that's good for Linux (Linux still has a few issues with NVIDIA GPU as they don't make them opensource, although Linux Mint does have built in NVIDIA support out of the box).
As is standard with Linux you install the last stable release, not the latest one. In this case Linux Mint 22.
After burning the install image to a USB stick it took about 10 minutes to format the drive and install the OS, to the point of logging into the desktop for the first time. Compare that with Windows 11. Last week I had to fix my wife's laptop which was taking 30 minutes to boot into Windows 10. I replaced her ageing HDD with an SSD and it took about 1.5 hours to install and go through all the hand holding welcome screens and pointless setup rubbish. Linux Mint has none of this junk. It asks you to set an admin password and then loads.
After install I checked hardware drivers (habit due to Windows installs) and it didn't need any. Everything was up to date and working. It even found, installed and had the networked Brother printer setup and ready to go seconds after booting. In contrast my wife's laptop after the lengthy install still had lots of ! in the device manager list and I had to spend another hour going through the HP website's drivers to randomly find the right ones. The mouse 2 finger scrolling still isn't working! It is in Linux out of the box!
Mint even worked out of the box to the extent than Bluetooth was working and asking if I wanted to pair my headphones, the Wifi was already connected as it had asked for the password during install. I even plugged a spare HD monitor into the HDMI port and it just worked instantly as a second screen.
Anyway, my point here is that Linux has come a very long way in the last 20+ years. If you are not a gamer (but I will come back to that in a minute) and you don't specifically need to run Microsoft Office or some propitiatory software from companies such as Adobe and Autodesk, then there really isn't a good reason to stick with Windows.
Linux Mint especially is designed to be as much like Windows as possible to make the move less painful. It has far more customisation than Windows allows these days, and as standard it comes with quite a lot of software preinstalled. Thunderbird mail is far easier to use than Outlook, LibreOffice works almost the same as Office and can go everything the average user will ever need. And every web browser is the same. And if you need to access any Android apps install Chrome browser and the webapps are already there. I use this for the notes app Keep which I have on every device.
Many also hear Linux and instantly think Commandline. For years you can happily use Linux, especially Debian forks suck as Ubuntu and Mint without ever having to touch the commandline. But it is powerful. And some installs such as for servers only use the commandline as it's all that's needed. If you want to go further then yes it might be needed to directly install something from GitHub, but on the whole most programs are in the Mint application repository and many program makers now directly cater for installers directly from their websites that use .deb installers that work like a Windows .exe installer.
Now for gaming. Linux was always the OS with limited game support. The odd game was released but not many. Steam has always had some games with native Linus versions. And Wine was an option to try and get more working. But this all changed when Valve released the Steam Deck. It came with the Linux based Steam OS and a compatibility layer called Proton. Valve put a lot of work into this and are still constantly working on both Steam OS and Valve. Over 19,000 games on Steam are now marked as fully Steam OS compatible, and this means Linux compatible.
And Valve have now shared all this hard work with the Linux Steam client. When you install Steam on Linux is automatically comes with the Proton compatibility layer installed. So you can install and run the same games that work on the Steam Deck. Obviously there will be differences because unlike the Steam Deck the hardware a different Linux distro is installed on might be quite different, such as amount of ram, cpu power, storage, GPU etc. but that's true in Windows too.
So anyway. I've not fully installed a new Linux distro to use as a desktop replacement in some time. I first played around with Linux over 20 years ago with Fedora 4. That showed promise but still needed a lot of messing around to get most things to work or setup and run. Now Linux is far more mature. More stable than Windows. If you want to try it out Linux Mint Cinnamon is a very good place to start, and you don't even need to install it to try it. Just make a Mint boot USB and boot from it. It boots straight into a full Mint install for you to play around with.





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