I made a complete switch to Linux about 2 months ago. Before then, I had Windows installed on my main PC, and SuSE Linux installed on another computer. I found the transition very difficult at first - just ask Anti-Trend and Sabashuli. The Linux environment felt so strange at first, Alien!
The directory stucture, the terminology, the device names, the graphical environments, applications and the package management are worlds apart from Windows.
Rewind a few months, I was trialing SuSE linux. I had such a hard time with it that I actually ditched it and reinstalled Windows again. I guess I was looking for a quick fix and didn’t have a good enough reason to ditch Windows, partly due to the fact that Windows was all I knew. Now that i’ve been using Linux, i’ve realised just how ineffiecient Windows is! Moral of the story? You won’t know how good it is unless you try it! And I don’t mean whack in a Live CD and play around with it for five minutes. You should install it and if nesscary, force your self to use it! Linux is no walk in the park, but once you grasp the basics it becomes a hell of a lot easier. If you get stuck, don’t worry, there are plenty web forums, documentation and user groups. Ubuntu has an amazingly helpful using community.
So why did I give Linux a second chance? Had it not been for Anti-Trend, I may never have given it a second chance.
Despite all his Mandriva propaganda, I installed SuSE…again. The only reason because a Linux magazine was giving it away free on the cover. And I couldn’t be bothered to wait for all those Mandriva ISOs to download!
Fast forward to the present day and I really wonder what all the fuss is about. I can watch videos, listen to music, play games and write documents. I no longer feel so paranoid about security and haven’t had to waste 5 hours installing anti-virus programs!
I still have Windows installed on my computer, but only as an aid to my MCSE. Besides, it’s only an evaluation version of Server 2003 (cough) and is resigned to a small partition on a spare computer!
If you are looking for a Linux distribution that ‘just works’, try SuSE, Mandriva, Fedora, Ubuntu or Kubuntu. However, If you want to learn the ins and outs of Linux you should try Slackware or VectorLinux. I’ve learned a lot about Linux trying to fix Vector.