View Full Version : Just Switched from Windows to Linux
Meticode
10-28-2025, 10:50 PM
With the news of Windows discontinuing support for Windows 10 starting this month (unless you opt-in for year of security updates) I decided to make the switch to Linux to the distribution of Linux Mint. So far I'm loving it. Linux Mint is user-friendly for beginners bringing a familiar Windows-like desktop and navigation to the user without all the ads and bloatware.
Lots of people are starting to migrate over to it for two reasons. One, the lack of support for Windows 10 coupled with Windows 11 being a bloatware, adsense OS. Two, the last few years Linux actually runs most games pretty well. Steam fully works on it. Most people were reluctant to switch simply because of gaming instability.
So far I've been able to find almost all the software I use on Windows also Linux or a replacement for it. I plan on buying a 2nd or 3rd Gen Lenovo ThinkPad with probably a Ryzen 7 Pro in it and upgrading it to Linux Mint right away.
If you're curious about looking to switch or got questions, or even just want to try it by installing it on a USB stick and running it off that to test it, go for it. I suggest the Cinnamon Edition if you plan on trying it out.
https://linuxmint.com/download.php
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERvPga0sF8M
Yes or No
10-30-2025, 09:19 AM
I played around with this a few months ago. Pop_OS! was the best distro I found that was able to do everything I wanted it to do.
Regardless of which distro you choose, if you use Claude, it will help you navigate any hiccups you run into and make the experience and transition pretty easy.
You will probably have to play around in the terminal a bit no matter what. It's not as easy as Windows, though all distros are pretty much infinitely easier than they were 15 years ago.
I have a dual boot with Windows at the moment because there's one game I need the Xbox network for. The game will run, but without gamebar it's just a PITA. Were it not for the one game I would have a Linux exclusive system.
Yes or No
10-30-2025, 09:23 AM
They're faster, they're more reliable and stable, they don't come with spyware. And they're all free.
Linux > Windows.
The spyware with Windows has gotten out of control and with Microsoft no doubt moving further and further down the ai rabbit hole, they are going to look at every single thing you do, how you do it, what you say, how you think when you say it, etc. All of it.
Not to mention Windows is already screenshotting your entire desktop every few seconds. Literally. And while it's not supposed to do this, it does indeed store your address, credit card info, social security, etc. Those things definitely leak through. It's a security nightmare.
Meticode
11-02-2025, 12:27 AM
I played around with this a few months ago. Pop_OS! was the best distro I found that was able to do everything I wanted it to do.
Regardless of which distro you choose, if you use Claude, it will help you navigate any hiccups you run into and make the experience and transition pretty easy.
You will probably have to play around in the terminal a bit no matter what. It's not as easy as Windows, though all distros are pretty much infinitely easier than they were 15 years ago.
I have a dual boot with Windows at the moment because there's one game I need the Xbox network for. The game will run, but without gamebar it's just a PITA. Were it not for the one game I would have a Linux exclusive system.
I ended up going with Linux Mint the first try. The only hiccup I ran into was initially after installing the OS on my partition Windows Boot Manager wouldn't disable and would want me to boot into Windows (which was reformatted off my hard-drive by the Linux Mint installer). After a bunch of researching I had to go into the partition tool on the Linux Mint OS on the thump drive I was installing from and remove all the partitions that exist, make a new parition for the EFI, then go into the BIOS and disable Secure Boot and make Linux the first thing that would run on boot up. After that it's been smooth sailing.
Linux Mint has been great the week I've tried it. I haven't wanted to go back to Windows at all. It' way more customizable, much easier on my old laptop's system and everything feels 'integrated' from the extensions, to apps, to applets.
It's nice not having to worry about an anti-virus or spyware. You only need tow worry about a anti-virus if you're sharing Windows apps from another computer. I don't really game on my laptop, so that's not an issue plus if I did I'd just use Steam anyway.
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