So I Bought A new NVME to Switch to Linux
Posted: Thu Nov 20, 2025 11:15 pm
Ever since the EOL for Windows 7 I've been wanting to switch to Linux. I've had these phases of wanting to switch for years, often dual booting in some capacity. I've recently threw it on to a 2014 gaming laptop as I didn't want to let it go yet, and eventually that might become a True Nas immich/freshrss server as the Nivida drivers become older and older. I also threw MX Linux onto my brother's old laptop to feel like I was using a computer from 2010s again.
But I would always come back to windows on my main machine due to comfort. I'm currently dual booting Nobara on there that I planned to do some testing to see if I could make a fulltime-ish* switch. Now I'm hearing more and more about the Microsoft AI shenanigans and my brains goes NIGHTMARE NIGHTMARE NIGHTMARE. So... in the near future, I might be done. Maybe I need to just go cold turkey and commit.
(*easy anti-cheat and Davinci Resolve File compatibility)
As title says on the tin, I've bought a new NVME, and an enclosure (black friday baby!) that I plan to replace my current windows install with and use it as a scratch disk / gaming drive. This will be slow process however, first I want to format the drive to get it prepped, and then when the windows update is on the horizons for full production, chuck my old windows boot into the enclosure and use Linux full time as an enforced "linux challenge". I'd only keep the windows install in the enclosure for when I want to play an easy anticheat game. I know Ideally it should be on separate machine all together, but uh... money. I'm not making a whole new rig for like the odd match in rivals or something. Maybe if we still had rumbleverse (rip), but no the money is better used towards a sever/nas config.
Will this go well? I'm not sure. Most of what I use is some kind of open source or has Linux compatibility. The only pain points that I know of is easy anti-cheat which is only an issue for multiplayer games, and Davinci Resolve and it's file compatibility. I'm still a novice to amateur user admittedly, but I know how to look through documentation, and I have set up what I've needed in fedora before. I'm only using nobara for convenience at this point because of the patches it does, and the davinci resolve installer it has.
What I figure is that worst case scenario for Resolve is I do have an old M2 Macbook Pro that's decently powered. Not that I trust Apple any more than Microsoft or google, but it could be worse. I'd prefer there was no ai or I could just uninstall it (maybe use something self hosted IF I WANTED) hopefully apple intelligence wont become the mess that is microsoft's.
If things do go well, every drive is becoming an ext 4 drive. It will be a pain in the ass because I have like 3 internal drives that's not a boot drive that's like 16TB, But I hear ext4 is good for speed, and I don't need this in a raid or the benefits of btrfs. I rather just follow 3-2-1 backup for anything important, than use redundancy, or speed up in raid0.
Those are just my thoughts at the moment. What do you guys think? Am I just paranoid? You guys making the switch? Have you switched?
But I would always come back to windows on my main machine due to comfort. I'm currently dual booting Nobara on there that I planned to do some testing to see if I could make a fulltime-ish* switch. Now I'm hearing more and more about the Microsoft AI shenanigans and my brains goes NIGHTMARE NIGHTMARE NIGHTMARE. So... in the near future, I might be done. Maybe I need to just go cold turkey and commit.
(*easy anti-cheat and Davinci Resolve File compatibility)
As title says on the tin, I've bought a new NVME, and an enclosure (black friday baby!) that I plan to replace my current windows install with and use it as a scratch disk / gaming drive. This will be slow process however, first I want to format the drive to get it prepped, and then when the windows update is on the horizons for full production, chuck my old windows boot into the enclosure and use Linux full time as an enforced "linux challenge". I'd only keep the windows install in the enclosure for when I want to play an easy anticheat game. I know Ideally it should be on separate machine all together, but uh... money. I'm not making a whole new rig for like the odd match in rivals or something. Maybe if we still had rumbleverse (rip), but no the money is better used towards a sever/nas config.
Will this go well? I'm not sure. Most of what I use is some kind of open source or has Linux compatibility. The only pain points that I know of is easy anti-cheat which is only an issue for multiplayer games, and Davinci Resolve and it's file compatibility. I'm still a novice to amateur user admittedly, but I know how to look through documentation, and I have set up what I've needed in fedora before. I'm only using nobara for convenience at this point because of the patches it does, and the davinci resolve installer it has.
What I figure is that worst case scenario for Resolve is I do have an old M2 Macbook Pro that's decently powered. Not that I trust Apple any more than Microsoft or google, but it could be worse. I'd prefer there was no ai or I could just uninstall it (maybe use something self hosted IF I WANTED) hopefully apple intelligence wont become the mess that is microsoft's.
If things do go well, every drive is becoming an ext 4 drive. It will be a pain in the ass because I have like 3 internal drives that's not a boot drive that's like 16TB, But I hear ext4 is good for speed, and I don't need this in a raid or the benefits of btrfs. I rather just follow 3-2-1 backup for anything important, than use redundancy, or speed up in raid0.
Those are just my thoughts at the moment. What do you guys think? Am I just paranoid? You guys making the switch? Have you switched?