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Nikita2014-11-22 18:09:05
linux
Nikita, 2014-11-22 18:09:05

How to move smoothly and painlessly to Linux?

What list of software (editors, web servers, etc.) and basic knowledge would you recommend in order to switch to Linux and customize it for yourself?

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5 answer(s)
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Eddy_Em, 2014-11-22
@cat-hat

There can be no smooth and painless transition. At first it will be painful and sharp.
We put Linux in a dual block, we collect a bunch of specials. literature. More precisely, the order needs to be changed: first, at least a thousand and a half pages, we read about what Linux is and what it is eaten with, then we install it.
We use it in parallel with the mastdayka, trying to transfer more and more tasks from under the mastdayka to Linux. Yes, at first it will be difficult, but after a year or two you yourself will not notice how you will stop loading into the mastdayka at all.
Then it will be possible to demolish this small-soft rubbish and use Linux.
EMNIP, such an action happened to me about 12 years ago. Since then, the mastdayke never needed.

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tushev, 2014-11-22
@tushev

Put Linux in VirtualBox under Windows. Make shared working folders. Then you can work on both Windows and Linux at the same time. It won't be so scary. But try to be more in the Linux environment.

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Alexander, 2014-11-22
Madzhugin @Suntechnic

The main thing - try to find applications that you use and that will not work in Linux.
Very soon you will realize that there are only one or two of them and they will have to be replaced with some, perhaps less convenient and functional counterparts. The rest either have versions for linux, or have an analogue, or are not needed at all.
Start by making a list of the apps you use.
You can right here.

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Sergey Petrikov, 2014-11-22
@RicoX

It won’t work out painlessly and smoothly, either entirely and with your head, or you’ll get tired of switching and abandon this business. Entirely very simple, put any distro the only one in the system and use it, if something doesn’t work out, look for it, saw it, try it, if it’s completely unbearable, put windows again and score on linux. Rearranging the system is not a dual block, it takes more effort and therefore there will be more laziness to switch than to find a solution. The only thing is if there is a specific working software, google in advance whether there are any analogues on Linux at all. Before Win Vista, I sat on win only for 10 years, with the release of this buggy squalor, I realized that I would not sit on it, I began to try Linux: ubuntu, openusa, debian, arch, kubunta on it for about 3 years, then I got tired of fixing fallen off after each update pieces of the system moved to OS X,

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Sergey, 2014-11-22
@begemot_sun

No painless. Just look for analogues of those applications that work in Linux. And work on Linux.
Wine will also help you, or a Windows virtual machine in linux (just kidding).

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