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Whiplashx2007 08-01-2012 10:42 AM

Best Linux Distro for Laptop?
 
I am going to Install Linux then put windows 7 on a Virtual Machine. Which Distribution would be best for this setup?

sycamorex 08-01-2012 10:54 AM

Hi and welcome to LQ.

There's no one right answer to your question. We all have different preferences and likes. Most distros (distributions) would do.

Some popular distros are Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora, Slackware.

For me the best one is Slackware. For you it might be Mint. Usually new linux users try a few distros until they find which one they feel most comfortable with.

Have a look at http://distrowatch.com/
There's a list of 10 most downloaded linux distributions.

HTH

Didier Spaier 08-01-2012 10:56 AM

Hello, welcome to LQ

About any Linux distribution can be used that way.

Please tell us what do you wish / need / expect / require / plan to do with it so it we can give you more precise advise ;)

Whiplashx2007 08-01-2012 11:16 AM

I am a developer, so Windows will be used for development and minor Internet Tinkering. I am using this laptop for a few months, then I will be giving it to my gf to use for school. She is computer retarded, so that's a big part. I posted this in the Newbie section because I am not very familiar with any distro other than Fedora.

DavidMcCann 08-01-2012 11:17 AM

I'd say one which makes it easy to encrypt your files: Fuduntu, Kororaa, Mepis, Mint, ZevenOS, ZorinOS. Laptops are so stealable, and if your unencrypted personal data is on it, you've got trouble.

Unlike Windows, you get to choose a GUI and they can be very different. What some people love, others hate.
Gnome: Fuduntu, Kororaa, ZorinOS
KDE: Mepis
Mate: Mint
Xfce: ZevenOS

They also have different release policies:
Rolling release (no versions — install once and then update regularly): Fuduntu
6-monthly: Kororaa, Mint, ZevenOS
annual: Mepis, ZorinOS

Don't forget you can try a live disk before you commit yourself to installing: try several.

Didier Spaier 08-01-2012 11:36 AM

If you have ~ 30 GB available I would install two (in two different VMs, of course).
- The recently released Linux Mint "KDE" edition for your gf. She will have no problem using it.
- Slackware for yourself, as it is very stable and you will not be afraid to edit some text files to configure it to your taste. It includes all you need for a desktop and a server as well, which will be easy to set up. It can use encrypted partitions. In this case maybe you could wait till Slackware 14 be released, probably in a few weeks.

DavidMcCann 08-01-2012 12:02 PM

Beware Greeks bearing gifts — or Slackware users offering Slackware. If you are new to Linux, you are unlikely to like it. Yes, you can encrypt files in Slackware: if you read the manual and work out how to do it yourself, as opposed to just ticking a box when you install.

Luckily, one of the things you learn when using Linux is to take Slackers with a pinch of salt :) You'll notice I didn't suggest either of the distros I use: I was trying to suggest what you might find useful, not telling you what I like.

Didier Spaier 08-01-2012 12:20 PM

@DavidMcCann: you are entitled on all your opinions, including the ones regarding Slackware users, of course ;)

There should be a reason though why some people, at the end of their distro hopping period, try Slackware and never look back...

You are right though in that if the OP is in a "tick a box and forget it" mood he probably won't like Slackware.

But I made the assumption that this was not the case, as he is a developer. Of course I can be wrong.

PS "Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes"... Do I *really* look like a Trojan Horse :scratch:

AwesomeMachine 08-01-2012 01:04 PM

Slax is the most enduring and most stable distro. I never did get to really learn it, but I've used it many times. Ubuntu is debian unstable fork dressed up by Canonical. I don't use SuSe much anymore, but opensuse is good, especially for virtual machines. It has a xen gui. Most Linux is Debian of some flavor or another. I use that most of the time, because the package I need is usually in the mirror repository. Fedora is great, but you have to upgrade often.

brianL 08-01-2012 02:35 PM

Try a few distros and choose the one that suits you, don't choose on the basis of others' opinions. And take everything David says about Slackware and its users with two large pinches of salt. ;) :)

snowday 08-01-2012 05:46 PM

My advice: If you value your relationship, don't force your "computer retarded" girlfriend to use Linux. Let her use Windows if Windows is what she knows how to use, and set up a "dual boot" with your Linux distro of choice (Fedora?). Significant others don't like being summarily converted to Linux, is my painful experience. :)

sljunkie 08-02-2012 08:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brianL (Post 4743417)
Try a few distros and choose the one that suits you, don't choose on the basis of others' opinions. And take everything David says about Slackware and its users with two large pinches of salt. ;) :)

Second that.

Debian and Fedora are good, but the latter has the annoying practice of updating the kernel WAY too often. I tried it, liked it at first, but then after one or two updates it has sacked my superblocks. :(

If you want to go for Slack, don't start with Slackware, start with Salix. I highly recommend the MATE edition. It has everything a usual user normally to have (web browser, e-mail reader, office suite, torrent client...) AND it had slapt-get with dependency resolution. The only down-side of it is that its default media player (Whaaaw!) is too simple and you may have a hard time playing DVD's. But you can solve it with an one-liner: 'slapt-get install vlc'. :hattip:


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