I’ve wanted to go over to Linux for a long time but I have no idea how to go about it. I hear about incompatibility problems with hardware and all the different options for different Linux OS’s and that’s it, I forget about it for a while to avoid the headache.
So where do I start? I don’t even know how to choose hardware or what to look for. The number of options with Linux makes things a little confusing.
And although others here have answered the question before, I’m unsure what I have to do to stay ‘safe’ on Linux. Are there extra steps or is it just the standard, don’t open dodgy links and turn off Java script in the PDF viewer kind of thing? Does Linux come with a trustworthy firewall/antivirus/malware detection? Is there a chance of Linux e.g. sending my passwords, etc, to someone or just letting someone into my harddrive? I hear that ‘open source’ means people can check the code but how do I know if someone has checked the code—I wouldn’t know what to look for myself.
I followed the Linux subreddit but the users the can be rather… enthusiastic, which is great, but I need something far more basic to get started lol.
Is there a good step-by-step guide somewhere? Or can anyone give me some pointers/tips/advice?
I mainly browse, type, and read pdfs and other text files. No gaming, although I wouldn’t be opposed to it. No need to be mobile; laptops are terrible for my back so I always use an external monitor, anyway, so I won’t be using it ‘on the go’.
sudo
is just running things as root, which is an account on every Linux system that has permission to do everything. The dangerous part is running asudo
command if you don’t know what it’s doing, because using the extra permissions, a command can do things like delete your files, break your system, install malware, etc.sudo
itself isn’t going to do anything bad, but the command it runs could.Thanks for explaining this, Elara. Are there any common dangerous commands that I should be wary of? Or any command line databases that are known to be dodgy?
The main thing is just make sure you know what the command is going to do before you run it. There are no specific commands that are dangerous, there are many ways to make a dangerous command. For example, if you see
rm
, that’s the remove command. It deletes files permanently. Oncerm
removes a file, there’s no trash you can retrieve it from, it’s gone forever, so make sure it isn’t deleting anything important. Some important things are/
and~
. If you see a command removing/
like the one Sleepless One mentioned, that’s removing all the files on your system./
is the root directory, it’s the place where everything on your computer is stored.~
is your home directory. It’s where things like your documents, pictures, etc. are stored. So, if someone gives yousudo rm -r ~
or something, do not run that. If it’s something like~/.config/somefile
, that’s fine because it’s deleting a specific file inside your home directory rather than the whole thing.sudo rm -rf /