Hello, I got almost for free a Lenovo laptop: CPU Intel i3 8130, 4Gb RAM. I would like to use It to learn Linux. I saw some people using Arch to learn the inside out of Linux, but I’m afraid It could be to challenging. What do you suggest? What Is the best way to learn? Thank you. Edit: First of all I thank you all for your suggestions, I think that this is what makes this community special. I installed Fedora Xfce for now and I worked all evening to male it work and customize it. I’m learning a lot already. I’ll move to Arch as soon I’ll feel comfortable with Fedora. Thank you all again.
I don’t get the people recommending Mint and Ubuntu or atomic distros, those are great for a beginner who just wants their system to work without having to be bothered, but I’m not sure you could find worse if your goal is to learn how your system works…
You need :
So I’d say either Arch or Debian (or Debian testing, if you want Debian but with updates more often than once every century). Not sure about Fedora, I’m not familiar with it.
Arch is a great way to learn how your system works, if you know what you are getting into.
The documentation is very extensive and a lot of people use it, so when you do encounter a problem you can usually find the solution easily enough in the docs or in forums.
I’m also not sure that it’s inherently more challenging than other distros, a lot of stuff is pretty much the same no matter your distro, except that with Arch nothing gets in the way so personally I find it easier to understand.
And the reputation Arch has for breaking stuff during updates is either very overblown, or I’ve just had the most terrible luck and missed all of them. I’ve only seen one big breakage, the FUSE regression, which was pretty cool, and that was fixed almost immediately.
There’s also software availability to consider, and Arch is one of the distros with the most packages available (second one after NixOS I think).
Personally I regret having wasted several months on another distro because people kept saying that you absolutely shouldn’t start with Arch, and that if you wanted to try Arch you HAD to do it with a manual install (guess how well that went when I was fresh from Windows 😂 ). So I failed to manually install Arch for a month, then I spend three months on a random other distro before finally installing Arch with the archinstall script. I expected that it’d be insanely complicated and that I’d break everything in a few days but it’s been surprisingly straightforward. The challenging part is understanding how things work when the documentation presupposes prior knowledge that I don’t have. Now after over a year I’m familiar enough with Arch that I’ll try a manual install when I change hard drive and reinstall.