Why (almost) Everyone Should Try Ubuntu
By now, experienced Linux users who've disregarded my opening injunction to take their eyeballs elsewhere may be taking exception to all this Ubuntu talk. But here's the thing: Success for Ubuntu helps your distro, too. Both in its ease of use and in its popularity, Ubuntu has the ability to serve as a gateway distro for both users and vendors. Once people get their arms around Ubuntu, they may opt to try on Fedora. Once vendors start supporting Ubuntu, it's a trivial matter to support PCLinuxOS, too. While it would be foolhardy to expect any vendor to offer universal support for every conceivable distribution, growing support for any distro helps the growth of Linux at large.
Some of you die-hards may find all this “growth of Linux” talk offensive, preferring to horde all this Linuxy goodness for yourselves. Well, that's fine, too. Even if the unimaginable happened and Linux went totally mainstream, there'd be nothing stopping anyone from creating ever l33ter distros that no sane n00b in the universe would ever try. But really, you guys aren't supposed to be reading this anyway, so go away and let me talk to the newbs some more.
If you're just entering the Linux community, you've come at an exciting time. This all may seem new and intimidating now, but if you take a proactive interest and make use of the myriad forums and other community resources, you'll be a power user in no time. And once you learn to harness the phenomenal power and versatility of whatever distro you use, you'll find unlimited potential in your PC.
Fundamentally speaking, the differences between any two Linux distributions are typically minor, and uncertainty about where to start should never stop anyone from jumping in. For all the reasons I've stated here, I recommend new users start with Ubuntu. But more than that, I recommend simply starting. If you're more interested in jumping head-first into something more technically challenging, try Gentoo or Slackware. Or even check out one of the open source BSD OSes. The important thing is to pursue your own interests, try something new, and set your PC free.
It's easy. Just follow this link.