I'm a bit late to this! Lots of great advice already, but I'll stick my oar in anyway.

On 20/03/13 15:43, David Smith wrote:

1. Is this the right way to go and if so what distribution would you
recommend? Should I buy DVDs or download?

I'd suggest downloading. As others have said, you can burn to CD or use USB sticks. Most distros now have a "live" variant. I recommend making good use of these. Firstly, it lets you get a look at the distro before you commit to it. Secondly, it lets you test if your hardware works well with that distro.

Generally now if a piece of hardware works with one, it will work with most of them since most distros use an unmodified kernel.

Remember, they are all free so go crazy! If time permits, try out a few. It's /reasonably/ easy to switch later. (If you get asked when you actually come to install something, try to choose a separate partition for /home - it will make switching distro or upgrading much easier).


2. Is it simple to find say printer drivers that run under Linux?

I've found it to be easier than XP. http://www.openprinting.org/printers might help too.

3. Do I need antivirus software? (MACs now do) Any other security
software essential?

No.

5. Does Linux have the equivalent of DOS batch files?

The nice thing about Linux is that most distros come with a number of programming languages installed already. As Ralph and others said you get a default shell which is very powerful and choice of a few others if you don't like that one. You probably also get Python and Perl installed by default. FreePascal is available. You can also get C#, lua, ruby and pretty much anything else you can think of!

FYI I run the following software at present:
Open Office

Most Linux distros have switched to Libre Office now, a fork of Open Office but you will find it very familiar.

Foxit pdf reader

There are several PDF readers avaible.
Firefox
Tbird.
Available and possibly installed already.

Free Pascal
Available

A couple of other interesting things about Linux distros; firstly, after install you get a fairly complete suite of applications already installed (depending on the distro) so there's no need to look for browsers, office suites, PDF readers and the like. Secondly, most distros use some type of software repository from which your system can fetch software to install. Depending on the distro, the choice can be vast or fairly limited. Most mainstream distros have enough choice for anyone.

One more thought - why not get a live CD and try it out on your current desktop? Or, try one of the "portable" lightweight distros that is meant to run from a memory stick, like Puppy. Just for fun. Remember it's free, so you can just have fun and play with it. It's like having the keys to a sweet shop! :) It might get you a functional machine to go and look at all the other links people have given you ;)

In addition to the distros suggested (Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Fedora) you could consider one of the Linux Mint variants (the XFCE one is nice). There's also OpenSuse and Mageia. All of these are very competent and decent distros.

Have fun!

John



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