Hi, I’m learning python and I have purchased a 2015 MacBook air. I want to install Linux on it (Ubuntu) but my friend who’s a developer told me to leave the MacOs because they are similar as operative systems. What do you think? Should I change the os and switch to Linux? Thanks. Edit: thank you for your replies. There are still so many things I don’t understand about programming and os, sorry about that.

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Use Linux, give it a try.

I recommend Fedora Kinoite or Silverblue. These are Systems built differently, they have an immutable core that is not changed and is thus very stable. You can add and remove packages, which will only be applied after a reboot, and in general keep this as minimal as possible.

You can easily reset your system to be running again.

As a mac user I recommend to use GNOME, maybe with dash-to-panel, so use Silverblue which is Fedoras “atomic” version of GNOME.

After installation you may want to rebase to ublue and their silverblue-main image to get more goodies.

Install a distrobox with ubuntu or fedora, install pipx there and whatever IDE etc. you need.

distrobox create -i (press tab to get the image list) Dev 
distrobox enter Dev

# add some repositories for pycharm and more
sudo dnf install fedora-workstation-repositories

# add repo for VS Codium (FOSS version of VSCODE)
sudo rpmkeys --import https://gitlab.com/paulcarroty/vscodium-deb-rpm-repo/-/raw/master/pub.gpg
printf "[gitlab.com_paulcarroty_vscodium_repo]\nname=download.vscodium.com\nbaseurl=https://download.vscodium.com/rpms/\nenabled=1\ngpgcheck=1\nrepo_gpgcheck=1\ngpgkey=https://gitlab.com/paulcarroty/vscodium-deb-rpm-repo/-/raw/master/pub.gpg\nmetadata_expire=1h" | sudo tee -a /etc/yum.repos.d/vscodium.repo

sudo dnf install -y pipx pycharm thonny codium whatever

# export the apps so they appear in your app drawer

distrobox-export --app pycharm
distrobox-export --app thonny
distrobox-export --app codium

Explanation: Distrobox uses a Podman container, and allows to install a “separate linux distro” in there. This will be very minimal version and you can do crazy things there and your base OS will not be touched.

That way you can install Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, Arch/AUR, Opensuse and more apps.

Using the “export” function the graphical apps will appear in your app drawer and work perfectly fine. Be sure do do a distrobox upgrade --all once in a while.

The experience is really painfree.

On the main OS, get your rest apps as Flatpaks which are sandboxed like on Android, work very well, are up to date and also dont touch your base system.

Updates go in the background without you noticing, once you reboot you are on your updated system. If an update broke something, do rpm-ostree rollback and stay on that version. If you do something crazy like adding a ton of apps to the base OS, do a sudo ostree admin pin 0 to always save the currently used system as a backup.

It is way better than Windows, not sure about MacOS but it is for sure way more free. If you want a well working, elegant and simple desktop, GNOME / Fedora Silverblue is a very good option.

See here for documentation

Get help in Fedora Discussion

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Hi, I have another MacBook Pro from the year 2011 and I want definitely to install Linux on it. In this blog https://jaslarue.blogspot.com/2020/01/installing-linux-on-2011-macbook-pro.html?m=1 they suggest to install Elementary Os. What do you think?

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I dont think elementaryOS cuts it. Their desktop is too old, they use some old Ubuntu Base.

I would also go with Fedora silverblue ublue here

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As I am a beginner do you think it will be difficult to set up? Sorry if this has turned into a conversation.

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