First off; Hello My name is Charlie. New on the forum. Pretty new to Linux.
I have installed Linux twice in the past just to test the waters, knowing that one day I would drop Windows for good. That day is rapidly approaching since a Windows update borked one of my Windows 10 installs a few weeks ago. I really don't like W10, I mainly use Win7, But its days are numbered.
I had Open Suse on a dual boot with Win XP years ago. Had Ubuntu on triple boot with Win7 and 10 about a year+ ago. Didn't do much in it either time, but boot regularly to play around. I'm ready to get serious now.
I want Kubuntu 18.04 LTS on my laptop for now, and will eventually do a dual boot with Win7 on my desktop.
I have built many Windows based computers, both from new components and from salvaged components. Also maintained them and updated and upgraded as needed. Somewhere between 50 and 75 total. Also, I worked for 10 years in a production facility as Asst. Quality Mgr. where, as part of my responsibilities, I had to maintain and upgrade 20 production floor computers as well as teach people how to use them and enter data.
I have been using since 1985, and building since Windows 98.
I say all this so that you will know that I am 69 years old and know a little bit about computers. A programmer I am not. Everything I have done in CMD I have done with assistance. Either a person, a forum, or a book.
What I need assistance with now is setting up my SSD prior to install.
I have: Toshiba laptop (S855) i7 3630QM Ivy Bridge 2.4GHz running between 2.8 and 3.2GHz. - 16 GB DDR3 - Intel HD graphics 4000 - Realtek RTL 8723AE wireless n PCI-E NIC - 2 USB 3.0 ports.
I have a Sandisk Ultra 32GB USB 3.0 stick with Kubuntu ISO installed and ready to go.
I have a 1TB Crucial MX500 ssd (new, never used) that I am going to put in the laptop for the install.
It curently has a 500 GB ssd with W10 that , for the next few months, will be moving in and out of the laptop as needed. I think that because of that, the BIOS will see it as a dual boot, not sure.
Eventually, when me and my laptop are settled into Linux, That ssd will be used to put Linux on the desktop computer. (I do have my W10 current setup cloned to another ssd in case it is needed.)
Man, I think I've said too much already, and I haven't even asked a question.
Partitions. Need a UEFI of ? size. 512 MB, 1GB ? What I've read makes it kinda vague. The best answer I've found is to make as big as you need.
Does Kubuntu have EXT4 as default? Can't find that answer. I've read that it uses or can use ZFS. I like the Idea of that file system if it can be used reliably.
If EXT4, do I need a swap partition?
What size?
Do I need any other partitions? I've seen examples of systems with 1 partition using the whole drive, and I've seen others with several.
I believe I should be able to just boot to the thumb drive, and the installer will do what it thinks is best. (For most people).
I want what is best, fastest, but mainly most stable.
I am here for the long haul, not just playing around. I want Windows off my computers.
I have been watching Linux for a good while. Reading a lot of forums, watching a lot of videos. Linux has all the programs I need and they have grown to where I can switch from the Windows versions without missing anything. I am into photography, and want to pursue astro-photography. Linux has what I need.
I am ready to make the LEAP. (pun intended)
I know this is a long post, and I hope some one can de-cipher what I said and maybe help get me started.
Thanks, in advance
Charlie
I have installed Linux twice in the past just to test the waters, knowing that one day I would drop Windows for good. That day is rapidly approaching since a Windows update borked one of my Windows 10 installs a few weeks ago. I really don't like W10, I mainly use Win7, But its days are numbered.
I had Open Suse on a dual boot with Win XP years ago. Had Ubuntu on triple boot with Win7 and 10 about a year+ ago. Didn't do much in it either time, but boot regularly to play around. I'm ready to get serious now.
I want Kubuntu 18.04 LTS on my laptop for now, and will eventually do a dual boot with Win7 on my desktop.
I have built many Windows based computers, both from new components and from salvaged components. Also maintained them and updated and upgraded as needed. Somewhere between 50 and 75 total. Also, I worked for 10 years in a production facility as Asst. Quality Mgr. where, as part of my responsibilities, I had to maintain and upgrade 20 production floor computers as well as teach people how to use them and enter data.
I have been using since 1985, and building since Windows 98.
I say all this so that you will know that I am 69 years old and know a little bit about computers. A programmer I am not. Everything I have done in CMD I have done with assistance. Either a person, a forum, or a book.
What I need assistance with now is setting up my SSD prior to install.
I have: Toshiba laptop (S855) i7 3630QM Ivy Bridge 2.4GHz running between 2.8 and 3.2GHz. - 16 GB DDR3 - Intel HD graphics 4000 - Realtek RTL 8723AE wireless n PCI-E NIC - 2 USB 3.0 ports.
I have a Sandisk Ultra 32GB USB 3.0 stick with Kubuntu ISO installed and ready to go.
I have a 1TB Crucial MX500 ssd (new, never used) that I am going to put in the laptop for the install.
It curently has a 500 GB ssd with W10 that , for the next few months, will be moving in and out of the laptop as needed. I think that because of that, the BIOS will see it as a dual boot, not sure.
Eventually, when me and my laptop are settled into Linux, That ssd will be used to put Linux on the desktop computer. (I do have my W10 current setup cloned to another ssd in case it is needed.)
Man, I think I've said too much already, and I haven't even asked a question.
Partitions. Need a UEFI of ? size. 512 MB, 1GB ? What I've read makes it kinda vague. The best answer I've found is to make as big as you need.
Does Kubuntu have EXT4 as default? Can't find that answer. I've read that it uses or can use ZFS. I like the Idea of that file system if it can be used reliably.
If EXT4, do I need a swap partition?
What size?
Do I need any other partitions? I've seen examples of systems with 1 partition using the whole drive, and I've seen others with several.
I believe I should be able to just boot to the thumb drive, and the installer will do what it thinks is best. (For most people).
I want what is best, fastest, but mainly most stable.
I am here for the long haul, not just playing around. I want Windows off my computers.
I have been watching Linux for a good while. Reading a lot of forums, watching a lot of videos. Linux has all the programs I need and they have grown to where I can switch from the Windows versions without missing anything. I am into photography, and want to pursue astro-photography. Linux has what I need.
I am ready to make the LEAP. (pun intended)
I know this is a long post, and I hope some one can de-cipher what I said and maybe help get me started.
Thanks, in advance
Charlie
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