this post was submitted on 21 Jun 2026
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Linux
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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But when the question is between Ubuntu and Kubuntu you can "convert" between them very easily. Not to mention that the fundamental difference between all Debian based distros is the version of the packages they offer, so you can very easily jump between them expecting most things to be the same.
Yes, that matters for you, it doesn't matter for someone who just wants something to use. That contributes to the decision paralysis of switching to Linux, when we say distro doesn't matter we're trying to remove that hurdle, because for the average guy that will just use his computer the difference between Debian and CachyOS is the name. Someone without experience in Linux doesn't understand what stability means, they think it means the system won't crash so they always try to use stable distros and get frustrated because they're out of date, or alternatively they think they want bleeding edge until it cuts them. And that's the crux of the issue, when we make a distro choice, it matters because we understand the differences, when a new user is trying to pick their first distro they're essentially throwing a dice, it doesn't matter where it lands, it matters how they feel about it.
It's hard for us to put ourselves back in the shoes of someone just getting started,
But they're not, they might be to you or me, but for someone without Linux knowledge they're very real questions. I have answered some form of some of those from people in the past.
Oh really? Would you mind telling me what's the difference between Pop, Ubuntu and Mint in a way that would matter for someone who doesn't understand anything about Linux?
Having to research what to use before understanding the difference will teach them nothing and make them give up before starting.
Yeah, but 2008 was a very different playing field than it is today. 2008 we were almost unanimously recommending Ubuntu or Mint, every forum you asked, every thread you found online it would have been essentially the same recommendation. It's easy to make the decision then. Today if you open 4 different articles from 4 different sites you will likely get at least 4 different answers to which distro you should choose. And theyake it seem like it's this big important decision that you have to get right the first time around, that's the mentality we're trying to fight.
An expert in clothes might tell you the same about them, and that's what you're missing, you are an expert, to you the difference between Mint and Pop is concrete and mensurable, to someone who doesn't understand what I package manager is it's just vague words without any meaning.
Cool, now explain to an alien who walks around naked why this jean and t-shirt is different from that jeans and t-shirt.
And if the alien above asked you what clothes to wear to go to the supermarket, you would just say "any jeans and t-shirt would do", only to have dozen of other people telling him "use this shirt and this pants", "No, that's a bad color combination for your eye color, use this one instead", "No, that show is hard to lace, use this outfit instead", "You're not really dressed unless you wear a custom tailor suit", etc, etc...
Precisely why we tell them it doesn't.
Yes, exactly, but they won't know until they understand, and you won't know until they understand, and they won't understand until they do, and no amount of reading will make them understand. The initial choice between 5 different "noob" friendly distros doesn't matter, the understanding you get from that will guide your next step, trying to take the next step before knowing where you're standing is a recipe for disaster