this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2026
106 points (98.2% liked)

Linux

14231 readers
912 users here now

A community for everything relating to the GNU/Linux operating system (except the memes!)

Also, check out:

Original icon base courtesy of lewing@isc.tamu.edu and The GIMP

founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Like the title says, my partner's laptop was still running Windows 10 and they got infected with a backdoor malware. We'll need to reset her computer. It's an Asus Tuf Gaming A15.

She's been using Windows 10 for as long as she could but support is running out. At her work the computers are on Windows 11 and she hates it. Plus she's fervently anti-AI and wants none of that forced Copilot bullshit and privacy eroding features of Windows 11. She's seen me use it for over a year now and I also installed it on our old OG 1st gen MS Surface Pro table and she sees how well it's going. So now she wants Linux on her laptop.

After careful consideration and comparisons, I've decided to go with Zorin OS. I thought of Linux Mint, but it just looks so dated. There are inconistencies in the looks and I feel it lacks some features that I found that Zorin OS has. (It's essentially Gnome with QoL extras.) My only concern is that Zorin has Snaps out of the box but I don't think that's a concern for her. I'll install it on a BTRFS partition with automatic snapshots and grub-btrfs to recover from snapshots. And I'll schedule monthly backups of her files through rsync, or whatever the built-in backup tool does, onto an external drive.

I've tried Zorin on a VM and it was already outstanding. On the live USB session it was able to detect her NVidia card and recommend either the nouveau or NVidia proprietary driver. Everything worked out of the box. So I'm fairly confident everything will work well. One concern I have is she uses her personal laptop for work, and needs to connect to her work's Microsoft account. I see there's an accounts section in the settings where this can be set up, but I've never used it, so that'll be a first. Her work also requires Cisco AnyConnect VPN client. There is a Linux client, but you need a Cisco account to download it, and her work IT department does not support Linux, so I don't know if she'll be able to get it. One of the IT people has Linux on his machine and was able to set it up so maybe we'll rely on him for that part. She'll also need MS Office which uses a work license. I wonder how that will work on Bottles. We can try with Libre Office but I know the spacing and fonts get all wonky when you open a MS Word document or a Powerpoint presentation. Every other app she uses is open source apps like Gimp, Inkscape, Audacity, etc. And she doesn't game much, but I know this will work just fine. And the Gnome-Network-Displays will allow her to cast her screen onto our NVidia Shield device for watching movies.

Is there anything else I should be concerned about? Maybe hardware wise? Or anything to so with Snaps that could cause issues?

top 50 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] dudesss@lemmy.ca 2 points 5 days ago

I have heard better comments from new Linux users recently that they prefer Fedora over Linux Mint, if that helps.

[–] dil@lemmy.zip 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Im less anti ai with local models using something like hermes, i like the idea of chat with your computer to get it to do stuff when not sitting at it, not that ive actually used it that way or thought of a usecase yet lol, I used it to make a web page using threejs and launch it, all I could think was damn, in the time I spent waiting I could've actually learned what I'm doing. I was just curious if it could, lowkey made something more decent than I probably would in a few days, demotivating af, forgot how much worse it is when the AI actually suceeds. At least when it fails you don't lose the motivation to learn.

LOL!!! Yeah, it's probably not nearly as fast as online services for sure. But you're not wrecking the environment while doing it.

I prefer to ask questions like "how do I ...?" than to ask it to do the task for me. This way I learn along the way.

"How do I declare an array in X language?"

"How do I write a foreach loop?

I don't give it much context so it gives me some generic example then I try to apply it to my problem.

[–] roger.wood@feddit.online 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

Just switched my wife and kids from windows to zorin. Most people don't super care about their os. They just don't want to be annoyed. A few months into it and I haven't heard any complaints.

Exactly. She just wants it out of her way. And I think Zorin can deliver that with style.

[–] Gabadabs@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 6 days ago (1 children)

If she absolutely needs desktop microsoft office, you can always consider trying winapps. It runs a full windows VM but makes the applications show up on the linux desktop like they were native applications. https://github.com/winapps-org/winapps

I think Bottles will do the job just fine. But I will look into your solution just in case.

I didn't know about this. That's really cool. Thank you! :)

[–] gedfromgont@piefed.ca 0 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Sorry, got nothing to add to your question. Good luck with the switch to Linux.

To everyone else: if you are still wondering why in 2026 it is still difficult for the average person to just "switch from Windows to Linux", just read all the comments here. I mean, I guess mostly the ones that are not deleted yet.

🤣🤣🤣🤣

Honestly, for newcomers the options should be Mint or Zorin, any buntu variant except Ubuntu itself, Debian and Fedora. Desktops should be limited to KDE or Gnome, maybe Cinnamon or XFCE for older hardware.

But I'm partial on Fedora. It's known for being a little cutting edge and having some problems. That and proprietary codecs aren't installed apparently with the installer. Instead I'd go with OpenSUSE. Same packaging system, but with extra quality of life features and more stability.

lol ! I can't even write a comment without contradicting myself hahahahahaha

[–] mereo@piefed.ca 52 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (10 children)

One concern I have is she uses her personal laptop for work.

I will never agree to use my personal laptop for work. When I finish work, I hide my work laptop under the sofa so that I don't think about it. I need to physically separate work and my personal life.

If, for any reason, she cannot get a work laptop, I would not recommend installing a Linux distro because her livelihood depends on it.

[–] adarza@piefed.ca 2 points 6 days ago

absolutely. my 30+ years experience says work and personal should be separate devices with no exceptions. and the 'work' one should be what they want on it, how they want it. if you then get malware, it's on them--not you. if you want something different, ask and get permission first.

[–] artyom@piefed.social 34 points 1 week ago (9 children)

My work tried to make me use my personal GrapheneOS phone for work. Unfortunately some things did not work. When they tried to fix it I said "look, your stuff doesn't work on my phone, if you want me to have a specific phone with specific software, you can send me one, but this one is mine" and so they did.

Although in this day and age I think it's plausible to say "I don't own a computer".

load more comments (9 replies)
load more comments (8 replies)
[–] mmmm@sopuli.xyz 17 points 1 week ago (5 children)

I'd make sure to keep Win10 as dualboot. Office and the Microsoft account are big concerns and you didn't verify on them.

load more comments (5 replies)
load more comments
view more: next ›