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Redjester45 07-22-2017 09:36 AM

Interested in....
 
Hello all,

I've got a very big newb question here. I've been taking a RHEL user and sysadmin class for work and having no prior experience with Linux, I actually am starting to appreciate it. I was wondering what the bonuses are to using it in a home environment is vs Windows as I am seriously considering switching one of my and my wife's machines over to it. Opinions and insight appreciated, TIA.

onebuck 07-22-2017 09:45 AM

Member response
 
Hi,
Welcome to LQ!

If you do not subscribe to Red Hat then my suggestion to you is;
Quote:

From http://iso.linuxquestions.org/centos/
CentOS is an Enterprise-class Linux Distribution derived from sources freely provided to the public by a prominent North American Enterprise Linux vendor. CentOS conforms fully with the upstream vendors redistribution policy and aims to be 100% binary compatible. (CentOS mainly changes packages to remove upstream vendor branding and artwork.
By using CentOS you will have updates available & free to use license so you can use/experiment with the OS.
Hope this helps.
Have fun & enjoy!
:hattip:

BW-userx 07-22-2017 09:50 AM

just do it, you can if space is permitting, set up a dual boot, or VM of Linux and just give it a go until you get stuck on Linux. It might benefit you too having it installed at home to get a better understanding of what you're learning in class by using a Linux OS at home. practice makes perfect.

Next thing you know you'll be setting up a web server and ...

Turbocapitalist 07-22-2017 09:57 AM

Yes, there is a very large amount of overlap between CentOS and RHEL. So using it will be rather helpful for learning RHEL. But there are some services and tools only in RHEL and you will need the subscription for them. That said, you might also look at something like Linux Mint for home use since it is more comfortable for beginners. I like the underlying Debian origins and the result broader selection packages but the main reason to recommend it is that so much is pre-installed and pre-configured so that it is a rather gentle transition even if it is a new experience.

About the migration itself, you might take it one machine at a time. Experiment with one using various distros until you get a feel for what works for you and what additional customizations are desired. I found the home transition worthwhile and haven't looked back. For me the tipping point was I had been using Debian and, later, Red Hat smoothly at work and was frustrated with the chronic difficulties from Windows machine(s) at home.

Edit: in short, it'll be easier to use and a whole lot less maintenance.

DVOM 07-22-2017 10:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Redjester45 (Post 5738567)
Hello all,

I was wondering what the bonuses are to using it in a home environment TIA.

Viruses? Malware? Defrag? Oh that's right, you'll never have to worry about those again.

BW-userx 07-22-2017 10:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DVOM (Post 5738578)
Viruses? Malware? Defrag? Oh that's right, you'll never have to worry about those again.

And do not forget that -- OK I am just going to reboot or shutting it off now, Then Windows say Oh no your not!!!! Don't even think about doing a hard power off even, I've got updates to install and well too bad I am going to be taking over your entire system for an undetermined amount of time before you'll even get your system back to use it.

Rickkkk 07-22-2017 10:24 AM

I would definitely encourage you to use linux at home. I dual boot it with Windows on all of my computers (except servers) to optimize flexibility, as suggested above by BW-Userx.

As to which version to use at home, I guess it depends on how important it is for you to have a system resembling what you are using in class and at work. If it is important, the CentOS suggestion by OneBuck makes a lot of sense to me. If not, linux beginners really like Mint these days, even more than Ubuntu, which used to be the beginner's system of choice not so long ago. If you opt for Mint, check out its different "flavours" (desktop environments, mostly, but one line is Debian-based instead of Ubuntu-based).

Let us know how it goes !

DavidMcCann 07-22-2017 11:43 AM

CentOS is not all that mysterious!

The first thing to note is that you need extra repositories for media codecs and some software
http://wiki.centos.org/AdditionalResources/Repositories
Note the point about setting priorities to prevent the base installation from getting overwritten, or terrible things can happen! For finding where to get software, see
http://pkgs.org/
and for finding alternatives to windows programs
http://linuxappfinder.com/alternatives

The second thing is that CentOS is best with Gnome, acceptable with KDE, and tiresome with anything else. If you don't like Gnome, then install the Gnome version, add your preferred desktop, and enable it. That way you get all the graphical "housekeeping tools" that are Gnome specific, or lack help-files without Gnome.

Mill J 07-22-2017 12:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Redjester45 (Post 5738567)
Hello all,

I've got a very big newb question here. I've been taking a RHEL user and sysadmin class for work and having no prior experience with Linux, I actually am starting to appreciate it. I was wondering what the bonuses are to using it in a home environment is vs Windows as I am seriously considering switching one of my and my wife's machines over to it. Opinions and insight appreciated, TIA.

VirtualBox is your friend on this one, alowing you to try any distro and mess with it without worrying about breaking you pc(I'm posting from an Arch vm:hattip:). That said it sound like you have some linux experiance, you should be able to install or dual boot no problem.

With Linux most people either LOVE it or HATE it or they never really used it .

hazel 07-22-2017 12:44 PM

Doesn't crash, doesn't freeze, no blue screen of death! If a badly-written program misbehaves in Linux, the program crashes, not the system.

No malware, no need for antivirus unless you exchange data with Windows users. You only need a firewall if you run server programs for other people.

No forced updates; you update when you choose. And it's fast. Windows updates can take a long time. No need to reboot after updates either.

Above all, it's easy to understand how your system works because there is no deliberate obfuscation in the name of commercial secrecy. And it's easy to fix problems too, because there are plenty of diagnostic tools and everything that happens is logged.

Redjester45 07-22-2017 02:54 PM

Thanks all for the input.
My plan was pick up a netbook or other laptop and go with Centos as I was told that translates what I learn in RHEL more directly. I will take a look at mint as well. Aside from my laptop all the others in the house are used for browsing/streaming/pictures so no problems there. My laptop is used for work that requires I.E. for the for security certs and whatnot.

pholland 07-22-2017 05:15 PM

Windows is better for handling DRM (Kindle books, Adobe digital editions, etc.). For everything else, it's Linux all the way.

Timothy Miller 07-22-2017 06:20 PM

If you're willing to deal with Google's policies, Chrome on linux works very well with MOST DRM nowadays.

Jjanel 07-22-2017 07:41 PM

Surf DistroWatch; learn lots of HowLinuxWorks, bottom up! Try LQ's #1: Slackware

JumpIN: *within* 10minutes of reading this (not counting download time), get a
CentOS7 VBox .vdi up&running on one of your M$Win PCs! Seriously! OK? ;)

Welcome to LQ; best wishes; ENJOY Linux! (RHC{SA,E} is opposite of IckyGuiDrm:D)

MrElusive603 07-24-2017 04:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onebuck (Post 5738569)
By using CentOS you will have updates available & free to use license so you can use/experiment with the OS.

This. CentOS IMO is the closest distro to Red Hat. If you use it every day you'll get valuable hands-on experience. One of the best ways to learn.

I used CentOS for a short while with the GNOME desktop. I remember having to add the Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL) repository to get some software I needed. There's an article on the CentOS wiki that might be of some use for you.

Apologies I can't be more specific as I haven't used CentOS for years, but I wish you the best of luck in your RHEL classes! :thumbsup:


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