I have a Windows box that I use pretty much only for gaming. I'll be working from home for the next year (sabbatical), so I plan to use this machine rather than my less powerful MacBook Pro.

Windows is not suitable for actual work, so in one week I plan to install Ubuntu (dual boot).

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@peterdrake I am a big fan of dual boot setups. For me, Windows is basically a gaming platform with occasional utility in printing or editing Word/Excel/... documents. Linux provides a more professional development environment, and Windows doesn't come anywhere near close in that competition.

I generally have dual-boot Fedora/Windows, and have found, particularly with recent Fedora releases, the setup is pretty easy. I always install Windows first, then add Linux next. One tip: if you have at least two physical drives, it might be easier to put one OS on each rather than messing around with complicated disk-partitioning schemes.

Note: I haven't tried WSL, so I can't comment on the relative merits of that approach.

@aebrockwell Yes -- handily, I have a fast SSD (to boot up the Windows side quickly for gaming) and a larger actual hard disk (for long work sessions on the Linux side).

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