As the title suggests, this is for beginner, so if you are advanced linux user, this post is not for you.
In this post, I want to share things I learn and know after reading countless forum trying to solve my problems. When I was still new, everything was rather frustrating. How do I solve the WIFI problem, How do I solve missing panel, How do I customize this or that. Most blogs and forums I read are not meant for beginners. They have many jargons that someone without a computer background may not understand. So, I feel compelled to write things I have learned from the past three years in plain and simple English.
A common conversation when you mention you're using linux will be something like this :
Bob (tech wizard) : Oh, so you are using linux. What's your distro?
Alice (noob) : I use (insert your distro). [Ubuntu, debian, linux mint, manjaro, etc].
Imagine building a house. if you want to build a house, it has to fit your needs and personality. So in this case, distro comes in different types. There are distro that fits for old computer, easy to use, minimalistic, lightweight, & stable. Now you have to pick, which one suits you the most and one that will serve your purpose.
is it lightweight & stable?
is it stable and challenging?
For beginners, I would recommend using ubuntu and linux mint. I personally use lightweight distro based ubuntu, called Lubuntu. It works for old laptop and laptop with low specs hardware.
Since you have picked your Distro, now it's time to pick the color, the plants, the aesthetic for your home. In this case the environment. Usually, linux distribution includes several environment that you can switch as you please. Some lightweight options are LXDE, LXQT, Mate and XFCE. mine is using LXDE.
So after you picked distro and environment, it's time I am telling you how to maintain it.
There are 2 things that you should be doing after filling your house with software :
As you can see, it will show all software and packages that are installed in your device which needs to be updated.
The example above is showing that opera needs an upgrade. You can also see there are 5 packages to be upgraded.
I generally check it once every two week. I heard some does it once a month (from my experience this will take a lot of time since there will be a lot of stuff to update as it gets piled on). The purpose of maintaining the house or the distro is keeping your system up to date. Sometimes there are latest release, patches, etc that you have to implement due security breach. PS : Opera and Firefox do this a lot.
If you are interested in learning more about open source and linux especially if you are not from STEM, here are some post that may interest you :
~ Mac