04-06-2021, 04:56 PM
I'm new to Linux Lite, but I installed MX Linux on a coworkers laptop because they were so frustrated with Windows being "so dang slow", and I suggested Linux. They so far are loving it. If I had known about Linux Lite at the time, I probably would have chosen to install it to their laptop instead as they are a typical Windows user who has never touched anything outside of basic computer use.
Windows is very resource intensive and there is not much you can do about it either. With Linux, if you don't like how something is configured, you can change it. Linux in general also runs a lot faster and smoother than the current Windows. I have crashed every version of Windows from 3.11 to 10 many many times. I have yet to be able to actually crash Linux in the roughly twenty years of use. I have lagged the heck out of it many times though but it has always taken the abuse like a champ and recovered nicely.
Concerning the question itself, my personal suggestions would be relating to documentation (LL does a good job here compared to most distros) and alternative software for common Windows software. I've seen a lot of people addicted to Adobe products and I've told them that there are a lot of free and open source programs that can do the same stuff. The learning curve might be a little steep, but it is well worth the effort. Another suggestion, of course, is making stuff easy, which LL does pretty well as well. When I first tried Linux, I tried Slackware many many years ago. It was the hardest thing I ever done on a computer. It actually kept me using Windows (ME) at the time just because it was so hard. As time went on and Ubuntu showed up and became more refined, I started using it. Then, over the last few years, there has been great improvement in Linux Desktop ease of use across many distros. I don't really know what triggered the change in general, but it is a welcome one. Windows users have been trained to know as little about the operating system as possible. To get them onto Linux and to keep them, it needs to be easy to test, easy to install, and easy to use. As time goes on and they become more aware of what Linux can do and just how much control they have over it, they will naturally embrace the hardest aspects, unless they are like my coworker and just use computers for basic internet browsing. I myself am not an advanced Linux user. I do poke around here and there and do some bash scripting here and there, but generally, I just want things to work and be reliable.
Windows is very resource intensive and there is not much you can do about it either. With Linux, if you don't like how something is configured, you can change it. Linux in general also runs a lot faster and smoother than the current Windows. I have crashed every version of Windows from 3.11 to 10 many many times. I have yet to be able to actually crash Linux in the roughly twenty years of use. I have lagged the heck out of it many times though but it has always taken the abuse like a champ and recovered nicely.
Concerning the question itself, my personal suggestions would be relating to documentation (LL does a good job here compared to most distros) and alternative software for common Windows software. I've seen a lot of people addicted to Adobe products and I've told them that there are a lot of free and open source programs that can do the same stuff. The learning curve might be a little steep, but it is well worth the effort. Another suggestion, of course, is making stuff easy, which LL does pretty well as well. When I first tried Linux, I tried Slackware many many years ago. It was the hardest thing I ever done on a computer. It actually kept me using Windows (ME) at the time just because it was so hard. As time went on and Ubuntu showed up and became more refined, I started using it. Then, over the last few years, there has been great improvement in Linux Desktop ease of use across many distros. I don't really know what triggered the change in general, but it is a welcome one. Windows users have been trained to know as little about the operating system as possible. To get them onto Linux and to keep them, it needs to be easy to test, easy to install, and easy to use. As time goes on and they become more aware of what Linux can do and just how much control they have over it, they will naturally embrace the hardest aspects, unless they are like my coworker and just use computers for basic internet browsing. I myself am not an advanced Linux user. I do poke around here and there and do some bash scripting here and there, but generally, I just want things to work and be reliable.