Getting Started
Install Linux, dual-boot, first steps and finding your way around a new system.
Linux vs macOS: How They Compare
A practical comparison of Linux and macOS for developers and switchers: terminal tools, package managers, hardware support, and daily workflow differences.
How to Install Zorin OS for Windows Switchers
Install Zorin OS on any PC for a Windows-like Linux experience — bootable USB, disk partitioning, layout chooser, pre-installed apps, and first troubleshooting steps.
How to Install Rocky Linux on a Server
Install Rocky Linux 9 on a server with correct partitioning, static networking, a minimal software profile, and post-install hardening steps.
How to Install Pop!_OS
Install Pop!_OS step by step: pick the right NVIDIA or Intel ISO, write a bootable USB, configure disk encryption, and complete day-one setup.
How to Install NixOS
Install NixOS from scratch: partition disks, write configuration.nix, pick a channel, run nixos-install, and master the nixos-rebuild workflow for atomic system changes.
How to Install Manjaro Linux
Install Manjaro Linux the right way: verify the ISO, run the Calamares installer, pick a kernel, configure drivers, and harden your new system in minutes.
How to Install Debian 12 (Bookworm)
Step-by-step walkthrough of the Debian 12 Bookworm installer: disk partitioning, tasksel, GRUB setup, and essential post-install configuration.
WSL: Run Linux on Windows
Install WSL2 on Windows 10 or 11, pick a Linux distro, access files across both systems, and enable systemd for full service management.
Windows to Linux: App Alternatives for Everything
A practical mapping of Windows software to Linux equivalents covering office, photo editing, audio production, development tools, and gaming.
Understanding Linux File Permissions
Master Linux file permissions from scratch: understand rwx bits, owner/group/other classes, chmod numeric and symbolic modes, chown, and the sticky bit.
Try Linux Without Installing: Live USB Guide
Run Linux from a flash drive without touching your hard drive. This guide covers creating a live USB with Ventoy or Etcher, enabling persistence, and testing hardware compatibility.
Linux Hardware Compatibility: What Works and How to Check
Check GPU, Wi-Fi, and printer compatibility before installing Linux. Learn lspci, lsusb, firmware packages, and the best lookup resources for your hardware.
The Linux File System for Beginners
Learn how Linux organizes files into a single directory tree: what / vs /home means, how mount points work, and where binaries, configs, and logs live.
How to Install Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Desktop
Install Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Desktop step by step: create a bootable USB, partition your disk, set up your user account, and apply first-boot updates.
How to Install Linux Mint
Step-by-step walkthrough to install Linux Mint alongside or instead of Windows — from downloading the ISO to applying your first updates.
Install Linux in a Virtual Machine
Install Linux in VirtualBox or KVM (GNOME Boxes/virt-manager), configure guest additions for clipboard and display, and take snapshots for safe experimentation.
How to Install Fedora Workstation
Step-by-step guide to installing Fedora Workstation 40: create a bootable USB with Fedora Media Writer, partition your disk in Anaconda, and complete first-run setup.
How to Download and Install Linux
Choose a Linux distro, download and verify the ISO, write it to USB with dd or Etcher, then boot and run the graphical installer — covered step by step.
10 Things to Do After Installing Linux
Ten essential post-install steps for any Linux desktop: updates, drivers, firewall, codecs, backups, SSH hardening, and service cleanup — all with modern commands.
How to Dual-Boot Linux and Windows
Shrink the Windows partition, install Linux without breaking the bootloader, configure GRUB, and handle Secure Boot — all in the correct order.
How to Choose a Linux Distribution
Match a Linux distro to your real needs — desktop, server, rolling vs LTS, hardware quirks, and package ecosystems — without wading through marketing noise.
How to Back Up Your Linux System
Learn how to back up your Linux system using Timeshift, rsync, Borg, and Restic — then tie it all together with a practical 3-2-1 backup routine.