Hi guys, I have a question if you would be so kind. I’m a professional developer looking to finally make a semi break into Linux.

My daily driver is a Legion 5 / 6800H with 3070ti 32GB and I have been running Linux Mint in a virtual box now for a few weeks.

I can’t make a 100% transition over to Linux due to the nature of my work but I could be running at round 80-90% of my work via a Linux OS.

With the above said, I’m finally going to install a dual boot instance today. Is Mint a good starting point? Anyone else have experience with Mint and Legion or would you recommend I start somewhere else? (I have heared many people mention POP OS).

Essentially I want something I can jump head first into and just make a start familiarising myself.

I’m trying to regain some control over my data and a jump to Lemmy and a Jump away from Windows feels like a solid start !

Thank you and keep rocking…

  • kylian0087@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Linux mint is a great way to start. Most distros based on debian are. Their is a abundance of information and community support with these distros. Personally i Like OpenSuse but even though it is a amazing all round distro. It is more of a niche and their for i can not recommend it to a new user, intermediate i can absolutely recommend it.

    About VMs Why not flip it around and use a Windows VM? personally I prefer it over dual booting if possible. no breaking boot loader when windows updates and you can snapshot windows which can come in handy. make a share between to 2 and you can move files from the VM to the host

    • zhenbo_endle@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I prefer Windows as VM guest too. However, it depends on OP’s need. Some apps may not perform good in VM

    • Bandicoot_Academic@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      Some programs refuse to run in a VM or require a lot of gpu recources which would require a gpu passthrough which is a pain to configure.

      • kylian0087@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Only a few programs refuse to run in a VM. Needing gpu resources is more common but it totally depends what software OP is using.