A friend of mine mentioned that a much more efficient way to distro hop is to do it in a VM rather than boot an ISO every time. I've only ever used WINE and am unsure how to go about doing this.
What's the best way to try distro hopping and what are some easy-ish distros to try out temporarily?
I've been using Linux Mint Debian edition for a while now and am happy with it on my main machine, but want to try out some others on my spare just to make sure there's not another one that I like more.
I'd say the best way for beginners is to install VirtualBox. You will be able to take snapshots before you try something stupid, so you can always restore to a known good state. The GUI is also pretty much fool-proof.
VirtualBox includes non-free drivers for some features. I’d recommend using QEMU/KVM with Virt-Manager instead, since it is entirely free and open-source.
We're talking about someone who wants to know how to easily distro-hop. That's not an expert level user. Have you tried unmounting an iso image from a virt-manager VM? Yes, that's how bad virt-manager is as a user-facing GUI.
Easiest would be to get a VM frontend like Gnome Boxes. You just download the installation iso of the distro you want to try, create a new VM in Boxes, point it at the iso and when it boots install the distribution normally.
It will be completely separated from your normal system. It's a second computer inside your computer. When you're done testing you can just delete the VM.
I’m not an expert of virtualization but I’ve had a few VM in Gnome Boxes.
I use Fedora Workstation and I love Gnome and the way you switch between workspaces instead of having multiple windows in one workspace like you do on Windows.
I don’t know if I would really have discovered the Gnome workflow if I only had it installed in a VM.
When doing the three fingers touchpad gesture in VM, it would bring me back to my normal Gnome installation, so I never really got to try KDE for real.
I guess if I really wanted to discover a distribution or a different desktop environment, it would be better to really commit as a VM just gives you a good sample.
I might be wrong as maybe some people know how to really isolate the VM from the real machine though..