I just installed Ubuntu 22.04.3 LTS (Cinnamon) on an empty laptop a couple days ago and have been experimenting a lot. I’m coming from being a Windows user since I was just a little kid playing old DOS games on my grandpa’s Win-98 PC back in around 2000. My daily driver is currently running Windows 10 but I am pretty adamant on not going with Win-11. I’ve been wanting to experiment with Linux for a while and Cinnamon so far seems like a lot of fun to navigate. Terminal is amazing. The fact that you can custom-write keyboard commands that can be hand-tailored to individual programs on your computer via the OS… that’s powerful.

I have not tried running WINE yet but I plan on doing so soon. I also have not done much of anything, honestly, except for learning how to search for programs with gnome-software --search=. I have also used sudo a couple times to download software here and there, but I know I am not tackling this in as systematic of a way as I ought to be to really figure this machine out.

What are some really important basic commands I can use to start branching out into Terminal command structures and learning more about how I can edit and customize my computer? And if Cinnamon has shortfalls or weaknesses that I may run into eventually, what are some good alternative distros that I could leapfrog to eventually? I do not have any coding experience (currently), but I do consider myself a semi-power-user on Windows, having messed with CMD many times and digging through all the damn menus to access drivers and alter ports.

  • faintwhenfree
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    8
    ·
    1 year ago

    Ok the joke is funny but you gotta tell new guys it’s sarcastic. Down voting for that only. OP is asking genuine advice, trolling like this hurts users switching to Linux and they may just go back.

    • poplargrove@reddthat.com
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 year ago

      I agree that was inappropriate, but it won’t work, on newer versions you have to pass --no-preserve-root to rm if you want to delete /

      • faintwhenfree
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        1 year ago

        Agreed but still all the user data is gone. Including default user profile. Then user has to figure out how to make things normal again.