You're starting out with Linux and want to personalize it or create your own setup.
You're starting out with Linux and want to personalize it or create your own setup.
You're looking into Linux installation options, which is great! For creating your own interface, Windows 10 can run Linux natively via dual boot. If you want to experiment inside Windows before setting up a full dual-boot system, installing basic Linux as a dual-boot will give you flexibility. Just pick the version that suits your needs and follow the installation steps accordingly. Let me know if you need more details!
If you wish to experiment, consider setting up a small virtual machine on your Windows PC using VirtualBox. There are many free guides available on installing various Linux distributions such as Ubuntu, Arch, CentOS, Mint, or even Elementary OS. Keep in mind that you won’t be able to transfer the virtual machine to your actual hardware once it’s ready. You’ll have to redo everything if you aim for a physical dual boot setup. Regarding customization, I’m new to tweaking Linux systems. I currently stick to different distributions and have tried Mint, CentOS, Ubuntu in VM environments. My goal is to install Arch or Elementary OS on a new SSD alongside my existing Windows installation.
You can experiment with Ist in a virtual machine. I suggest using the free VMBox software. However, since I'm new to Linux, I wouldn't suggest building it yourself.
you can design your own interface
it’s all up to you
they support this feature
let your creativity shine
Visit linuxfromscratch.org for detailed guides on building Linux from the ground up.
I prefer Debian as my operating system. No matter what you select, you can pick various desktop environments like KDE, GNome, XFCE, and more. Each offers extensive personalization options, allowing you to adjust settings using tools such as the GNOME Tweak Tool to suit your preferences.
A virtual machine offers a secure environment. Deleting files in a VM won't affect your main system, as it can't reach your Windows or host machine. You just remove the virtual drive and start fresh. This is why most web services are now running in virtual form. Unless you use dedicated hardware, you're getting a virtual setup in a data center. Many powerful machines with lots of RAM host separate containers for each client. Instead of deploying physical hardware for every user, this boosts efficiency significantly and cuts down on hardware expenses.
Alright, so I've got the Linux Arch image ready and set up a virtual machine with 1765 MB of RAM and dynamic storage. I'm about to start installing Arch inside the VM.