Originally Posted by LockOut:
This thread perked my interest as I have always been curious. I dont really use my laptop much except for surfing the net, some small torrents, and some photo editing. I have no complains about windows, but hey we all like to mess with stuff, its human nature. I ubuntu hard to put on a laptop? will i loose everything i have on here? Will i gain anything out of it?
I'd say go for it. What kind of laptop, processor type, memory? Depending on how old your laptop is you may want to put a lower power version on. I like Lubuntu on my netbook.
What will you gain? Speed (most likely), security (no viruses to worry about) and freedom from (most) corporate interest.
In my opinion, for the things you listed, there is nothing better!
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Originally Posted by WittyUserName:
I am about to put a new SSD in my macbook and I think I will partition and run Linux as well. I was thinking Mint....
Mint is ok. Lots of people hate the Unity on Ubuntu and prefer Gnome.
When using Ubuntu I use a Cairo Dock session. I have also been using SolusOS a lot.
....and there is always Debian
:-)
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Originally Posted by rennD:
Mint is ok. Lots of people hate the Unity on Ubuntu and prefer Gnome.
When using Ubuntu I use a Cairo Dock session. I have also been using SolusOS a lot.
....and there is always Debian :-)
This is a little out of left field, but I couldn't help but think...
This is the beauty of Linux. Don't like the look and feel? Change it. Want a dock? Pick one. Bored and want to be a little adventurous? Go for it.
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My distro has evolved from Ubuntu to a custom Debian installation just because of how I chose to upgrade it. I will be bummed if I have to do a complete new install. I have it pinned to the Debian stable repositories now so I will have less trouble keeping it upgraded. This was a lot of trouble to get initiated. I have kept the same computer running for about 12 years now. New motherboards, hard drives, power supplies, etc. but never a whole new computer.
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