My father asked me to set up a Raspberry Pi with the essentials to try out Linux and potentially ditch Windows if he likes it enough. He specifically requested YouTube, Amazon Kindle, GIMP, Audacity, KeePass, and a text editor like Notepad. I’ve installed Armbian Debian with the Cinnamon desktop environment. What would you have chosen?
As for the essentials, I’m not sure where to find a list of the most commonly used programs to install. I’ve just installed what I think he would appreciate, for example, Firefox with uBlock Origin, SponsorBlock, KeePassXC-Browser, and G App Launcher extensions. Now I’m going to see if I can install Amazon Kindle and Notepad using Wine, along with a couple of alternatives like Calibre and gedit. Then I’ll set up a Google Drive folder so he can share his files with his main computer until he decides to switch. Finally, I’ll use Timeshift to create a snapshot after I’ve finished setting everything up.
What essentials am I missing? Do you have any suggestions?
edit: I’ve realized that this is a bad idea. I’ll just install Linux on one of his spare x86 computers and explain that many programs aren’t available for ARM. Then, after he gets used to Linux, I can install it on his current laptop and maybe move his Windows installation to the spare computer, if I can figure out how to do that.
I see your edit, and would like to comment that you also haven’t mentioned which rpi you were going to try this on. I recently wanted to set up a quick little pc using a rpi, just so I could browse the web and maybe watch some videos. Tried a rpi2 I had laying around. No way. Moved to a rpi3, and while it would load most pages, youtube was a bust as it completely maxed out the ram and swap. I then went to a rpi4 with 8gb and it has been doable, kind of. Sometimes it’s pretty choppy with the video, but basic web browsing is ok. I did try my plex the other day through the browser and it was barely acceptable. Lots of stuttering and sometimes just hangs, but that’s not the ideal way to view plex on anything. Haven’t tried my rpi5 yet, but my point to all this is that I think you are on the right track setting it up on a spare pc he has. If you had given him a rpi as a ‘desktop’ replacement it might have just soured him on the whole idea.
Raspberry Pi 5 with 8 GB of RAM
Why do this on a raspberry pi and not just boot a live usb on his normal computer, or on a small partition?
I don’t know I would have to ask him.