![]() I did a YouTube video explaining everything in systemd if you want to learn more. It has Timers, bootloader, services, and much more. It does much more than just initializing the system. Systemd is very big and inclusive, but to many is bloated. Almost every Linux system these days use systemd. When your system is initializing on startup it needs to verify all the devices it will use and get the system ready for boot. I highly encourage you that want a themed multi-boot system to check out my Top 5 Bootloader project that auto-installs multiple themes: Init System It supports UEFI and Legacy, while systemd-boot is pretty much included with every modern linux distribution and only boots via UEFI and has a limited menu system. GRUB has been around for ages and can be themed while having a ton of flexibility. This may not mean much to you, but i’ll explain the difference. ![]() This can is usually either GRUB or systemd-boot. So this is what makes up the Linux distribution. and in Linux these can differ drastically from one to the next. With Windows and Mac you always get the same bootloader, file manager, etc. Why? That is because each Linux offering has different options at its core. Windows and Mac are called Operating Systems, NOT distributions… but in Linux this isn’t the case. This is mandatory to understand why there is so many different ones that splinter off of these three. While technically true, there is really only 3 distributions you need to know about for desktop use, but before we get into that you need to know about what makes up a distribution. To start with there is a misconception that there is thousands of choices in Linux Distributions. There are some that I have not installed, because it was just more of the same. However, over the past several years I’ve tried almost every Distribution that you can choose.
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