so with Windows 7 being yo L aka end-of-life we all have this situation if we use Windows on our network that well the operating system is now depreciated it's no longer safe to use Windows 7 that's right that's because it hasn't been appreciated for a long time well Windows 7 is is now what we call end-of-life and and some folks have said well I don't need Microsoft support I've never once in my entire Windows usage ever required Microsoft support sorry and I'm all tangled up here there we go now I'm better so if you do if you don't ever have to call Microsoft support why does it matter to you if Microsoft no longer supports Windows 7 well yeah so consider this that support so when we think of support we think about being able to pick up the phone and call technical support well that's not at all what it's talking about what it's talking about is that the support of basically them fixing problems that they find is gone so what that means is whenever a hacker finds a way to compromise a Windows 7 machine Microsoft used to fix it and roll it out as an update and and probably break a couple things that along the way but you inevitably fixed the bug that was causing hackers to be able to get into your system well now they're not going to do that so as hackers find exploits in Windows 7 Microsoft is just going to say well it's no longer supported right so we are not going to be patching that and now if you're running Windows 7 you've got this very bad situation and you know maybe you've got a mix of Windows 7 Linux Windows 10 and that one Windows 7 machine or god forbid a Windows XP machine sadly those still exist they still exist yeah right so if any of those exists that are no longer being patched or supported it can be a really bad situation because that's one it's a door it's a doorway like a back door into your computer know your network all of all of your devices time so we have to move to Windows 10 but maybe our computer can't handle Windows 10 I mean we've got to get more RAM we've got to get an SSD in order to be able to run it at a reasonably decent speed so that means a a new hard drive and by that point it's like do you really sink the money into this old thing so you're speaking to my current situation I have an old Windows XP system that I'm I'm setting up for our kids at home yeah so that they can use it for school work and stuff separate and then our family computer ok so somebody's playing games there's still the school or computer yeah but I don't want to upgrade this old system that's 10 years old yeah are you really gonna put a couple hundred bucks into something when you can walk into a Super Center and for 600 bucks walk away with a pretty decent computer exactly you know but low end but fast though will say I'm looking for the free fix yeah you've already got the gear so you know what are you gonna do so do we put more RAM into it do we put a new hard drive into it an SSD and do we do all that work or do you just now you know wipe it and put something else on there that's powered by Linux that's the option that's the one yeah so that's what I do that's what I've done and that's what I continue to do so you will also do once you hear why so personally so this is kind of like a personal opinion piece but personally what I have been leaning toward is Linux Mint over the past little while because the question comes up well what distro okay this is a new word if you're a Windows user yeah it's short for distribution what distro of Linux or what flavor of Linux are you gonna use because a lot of the Linux names are based on foods that is true the Atlantic's mint what flavor mint yeah right what flavor so the computer that I was talking about I had tried a few different districts I had boo bun to Matei I had also a good option I had Lindos from the inspire inspire yeah it'll inspire no longer yeah that's like fire but I ended up settling on a Linux Mint yeah yeah and I had was it Zoran Zorin OS on here yeah before I switch to cloud ready yeah yeah okay so Linux Mint for me it's a Debian based system so this is the same core that Ubuntu is based on right so I don't have to and I'm a very big Debian fan all my servers are like Debian Buster stretched before that and I'm always up to date with the latest in debian systems and and and so and I run stable I don't tend to run testing unless it's its feature locked and ready to go into stable and what that means again if you're new to the Linux world Debian is basically if there's a hierarchy so you've got like Debian you've got Red Hat you've got a couple other ones as well but those are kind of the big ones that I think you're going to encounter we don't need to really clutter the landscape but so Debian being one that it's gonna be based on it could be a boon - it could be Linux Mint it could be any number you mentioned a boon to matei another one which is essentially Ubuntu with a different interface yes has Mattei is like the menu the the desktop environment so now linux mint is also Mattei but it's it's based on a boon - correct all right so it's like this whole it's like this tree of hierarchy of where did this Linux come from so you've got Debian is like this fantastic server environment but then a boon to canonical is creating a desktop version of that and it's fantastic it's called a boon - and that's where a boon - Matei comes from and then you've got Linux Mint which is a fork of that another word for yeah it's like they copied the code base and then they've tweaked it and made it the way that they want it and that's the one that I've settled on and it's fantastic so I get all the benefits of Debian I get the benefits of Ubuntu and I get the benefits of the Linux Mint community as well and so I end up with this extremely polished desktop operating system that will run on my old hardware that I don't have to upgrade the RAM that I don't have to buy a new SSD and it works fantastically in it and it's fairly familiar I don't have to relearn the entire desktop paradigm in order to get used to it pretty intuitive like I carry yeah yeah now you talked about stable version versus yes experimental I think was test yeah so for somebody who's sit just getting into this and they're like oh I downloaded the experimental what's the pitfall to experimental versus stable for them testing or CID is what Debian calls it so way up at the higher level of the hierarchy which you're probably not going to touch as a new Linux user okay so remember that Debian is like up here okay so Sid is a testing version of Debian stable is is what they consider stable it's been tested okay so it's already gone through the testing phase if you were going up here going to testing is going to end up giving you newer packages so like when the new version of comes out GNU image manipulation program you're gonna have the latest and greatest right immediately part of the operating system but it may not be stable it may crash it may have bugs and that kind of stuff because it hasn't gone through that testing phase yet once it hits stable Ubuntu users would say it's older version right right Debian users will say it's stable yeah it doesn't crash it doesn't have any problems okay so that's a big difference between a boon to and Debian Debian stable means it's gone through a lengthy maybe two-year testing process like proofreaders but are using it ready to get is safe to use that's stable okay so it's rock-solid whoo boon to a little more bleeding edge little more cutting edge and the software versions are going to be a little bit newer and the package managing and everything else is a little bit tweaked for end-users but you're not dealing and with testing versus stable it's just here's a boon to ya and that's what you get so it's now it comes down to is it LTS any guess is what that means or is it not LTS a lifetime service very close long-term support long-term support yes so what that means so when you see in a boon to release that is LTS long-term support which is currently I is it 12 point o4 is the current LTS no no it can't be 12 no I'm on 22 one 1804 yes so man I'm in the past okay you're in the past because I talked about Lindos yeah so LTS means that version is going to continue being supported think of along the terms of what I mentioned about Microsoft is going to continue getting those patches and fixes for a very long time years okay so if you're new and you don't want to have to reinstall every couple of years or go through the upgrade process go with LTS if you like the brand new versions go with the current version which right now it's 2020 it's not quite April but because it's almost April that means that 2004 is going to be coming out in April because it represents the date right so it's every October and April its birthday in April like I do is that what happens Act yes like that so the most recent version then therefore would be 1910 19 point 10 so and always vary somebody's mind by explaining that yeah a little bit cuz I was like yeah yeah no it's October 2019 so that version would be the latest current version of Ubuntu but it's not LTS right so you you'd have to then go to 2004 when it's released through the upgrade path which is pretty easy now Linux Mint I believe subscribes to a very similar model but they base theirs on the LTS of Ubuntu so you're gonna get LTS I believe anyway well but they have the iterations throughout as well so like right now it's Linux Mint 19 and I believe nineteen point two something like that so so it's just it's how it trickles down so that's what I've settled on is Linux Mint because I find for my laptop for my desktop it's like the rock solid it's got its got current software I can install whatever I want on it it's beautiful and it works great you mentioned cloud ready yes which basically has turned Sasha's laptop into it's a Chromebook a chrome yes so you took your old laptop and turn it into a Chromebook and how how is that for you it's great I mean it works well I have all my access through the cloud right yeah so I am already using Google Doc yeah exactly I use Google Docs and slides and you know all of that and and so it was really intuitive for me like I had no problem switching to cloud ready but from what it was Sauron from Zorin and before that before that I was was I window I must have been Windows at some point wait on Windows it was Windows 7 I just got the sticker but I block things out I don't like I don't remember this and Jeff you mentioned Lindos Windows and Windows XP yes so you're more old school than me what are you running at home for real so on my we have the two system well we have three systems there's my wife's Mac she likes Mac yeah on our family computer we have a dual boot system of Linux Mint and Windows 10 nice and the reason for the dual boot is because of computer games yeah I was gonna guess gaming yeah it's gonna be that's what yep yep so I mean my kids are now at the age where they're like you know they're getting into some of those roblox oh they're past that now what else requires Windows what requires Windows it's also some of our at night you got some of our Steam games our Windows only what else do I have oh goodness trying to think of some of the games that are windows-only you don't game on your laptop I do not this is strictly like the strictly business yeah like the business I'm completely blanking on what all's on the computer that's not through Steam okay so gaming on the Windows 10 yeah and you Jeff has mentioned something that we haven't talked about yet tonight the dual boot dual booting so what that means is that he's chosen so your computer is obviously good enough to run Windows 10 anyways yes okay so that's a different scenario in some ways however if your computer is able to support it and you still want to go the route of Linux yeah you can do dual booting can you explain to us what that means yeah so with dual boot I have partitioned the hard drive that's a fancy word Jeff okay so partition means I took the space of the hard drive yeah and I segmented off into different portions and so that hard to do knows really have to be a straight 50/50 it does not have to be a straight 5050 and so my initial boot was not Windows it was Linux so originally it was just Linux yeah originally because it was a computer I built okay so it was a blank hard drive and my first install was Linux because when I'm doing the install it says do you intend to do a dual boot and so really yep so that was one of the install options and I'm like yes I intend to do a dual boot and so that's what happened is I set up the dual boot I'm blanking on what the dual boot program is called um gee part head no no it's the Installer process yeah I'm blanking on what it's called anyway so that popped up in the install and it's like okay how much do you want to partition on your hard drive okay your Linux operating yankem and so I set up it was not quite a 50-50 split because I need a ton of space for the games that get installed so it was more Windows I think it's 25/75 split ball and all in the hard drive that was the first time I did the install I've since wiped the computer reinstalled it and so that was when I had my spinning hard drive ok and then after I installed Linux I booted up again installing windows on the second partition since wiping out that going with my SSD it's the SSD I think is 500 gigs and I have two terabytes spinning hard drive yeah for it and so that's where my data is on the spinning hard drive yeah and then I'm using the SSD for the operating system and that's a 50/50 split okay very complicated sounding but it's by taut but from the scenario of a user who say is using Windows and wants to experience Linux and and and use Linux because it's safer because I know I can surf the Internet my kids can use the computer I don't have to worry about viruses like I do with Windows those kinds of things so let's say your kids sit down at the computer and they want to switch between Windows and Linux or vice-versa how is that process so all we have to do is we if I'm in Windows we go through a system restart and then on the boot it brings up the dual boot screen the default if the computer just starts up by itself yeah is to go into Linux yes I wanted to go into Linux automatically if say Windows does a system update in the middle of the night or something right and the computer boots I want to know that I'm going into Linux where it's a safe environment for the computer to sit as opposed to Windows okay where it could be exposed to something so it's an automatic boot into Linux but at the dual boot screen they can drop down the menu and select the Windows boot brilliant and the kids the kids know how to work it it's totally easy and they know when they can switch between Linux and Windows yeah not a problem it's a game get into Windows if you want to do anything else Linux is where it's at that's right I mean our daughter just turned nine and she's been doing it now for two years so if a seven-year-old can do it yeah like it's not that hard yeah awesome oh yeah Linux Mint Ubuntu all these technologies that we're talking about Debian they're available for free they're absolutely free mm-hmm and you can just download them off of their respective websites cloud-ready same thing how much did that cost you is zero dollars so you can't even say this is a sales pitch because it's free hey you know here you go take it so that's that's that's where it's at so that's good I think it's a good solution so hey let us know comment below how you're utilizing open source operating systems technologies and how it's able to you know in Jeff's environment help keep his kids safe help to keep his computer safe from infiltration Sasha it's breathed new life into an old laptop it's given her the ability to access her cloud-based applications like Google Docs and and you've mentioned spreadsheets is it all that kind of stuff and and you can do it from there you can jump onto any other computer and you've got access to it for me I just need a powerful Linux desktop operating system on my laptop and that's where Linux Mint comes in for me how is it impacting you what is open-source doing for you lately comment below I'd love to hear [Music]