Global Side Quests · 04 Linux · Open Source · OS 12 min read

Reclaiming
the OS.

The Linux Migration — breaking free from Windows bloat, corporate telemetry, and the passive software habits that were quietly running in the background of everything.

Side Quest 04 Linux Mint CachyOS Open Source Digital Sovereignty Minimalist Stack
Mission Briefing · Side Quest 04
~/dedelifewater/sidequests $
Side Quest
Reclaiming the OS — The Linux Migration
Objective
Break free from proprietary tech monopoly. Minimise system background noise. Optimise local hardware for pure development and performance.
Logic
Your operating system is the ultimate rig. If your base OS is leaking resource cycles and telemetry data, your entire digital environment is running on a weak foundation.
Status
Fully migrated to open-source environments. Telemetry severed.

— Choose your entry point —

Beginner · Intermediate Linux Mint The cleanest, most welcoming entry point into the open-source world. Feels familiar. Runs faster. No command-line experience required to start. ↓ Jump to Mint → Advanced · Power User CachyOS Arch-based, kernel-optimised, built to extract maximum performance from high-spec hardware. Not a starter distro. A specialist weapon. ↓ Jump to CachyOS →

"I am completely sick of Windows 11." That was the realisation that hit me like a heavy deadlift setback earlier in 2026. The sheer volume of unremovable bloat. The total lack of deep UI customisation. The creeping, invasive feeling of being constantly monitored by corporate telemetry running in the background of every session. And when a desktop operating system starts requiring a mandatory online connection just to manage local files — behaving like a poorly optimised, modern single-player game that demands an internet connection to launch — it's time to jump ship.

That frustration led me straight into the open-source world, starting with Linux Mint and eventually expanding to tinkering with CachyOS on my gaming laptop. Making the switch completely broke my old habit loops. Instead of being a passive social media doomscroller — a society normie running whatever software was pre-installed — I found a genuine dopamine fix in learning things from the ground up. Navigating the system via real terminal commands forced me to understand the machine underneath. My laptop stopped being a corporate data-harvesting node and became a highly specialised development weapon.

That shift in relationship with the hardware is the entire point of this Side Quest. ↻ Connects to The Akme — Digital Kill-Switch & Digital Renaissance framing

SECTION 01 · THE ENTRY POINT

Linux Mint — it just works.

For anyone looking to escape the Windows trap without a steep learning cliff, Linux Mint (Cinnamon Edition) is the definitive starting point. It looks familiar enough that the transition feels like moving into a cleaner version of your own home rather than a foreign country.

Transitioning to Mint was the cleanest, most straightforward OS setup I've ever done. From flashing the ISO to a USB drive, to navigating the native startup checklist — it treats you like a good mate looking out for you on a night out. Shows you where the door is, makes sure you've got what you need, and doesn't try to sell you anything on the way in.

Plain Language
Linux Mint · Cinnamon Edition

Linux Mint is a free operating system — an alternative to Windows or macOS — built by a global open-source community. The Cinnamon edition uses a desktop interface that'll feel immediately familiar if you've ever used Windows: start menu, taskbar, file explorer. No terminal required to get started.

The post-install hardening protocol.

— Three Steps · Clean Setup —
From fresh install to locked-down development environment.
1

System Sync

Mint immediately handles driver management and core updates without forcing arbitrary, unprompted reboots. The update manager is clear, categorised, and sensible — unlike Windows Update, which has treated grown adults like a toddler interrupting a work call for ten years.

2

Security Layer — UFW Firewall

Enabling the native UFW (Uncomplicated Firewall) gives you immediate, entry-level network security with a single command or a single click via the GUI. One layer of active protection that Windows buries in settings menus.

3

The AI Co-Pilot

I used Gemini as an interactive AI agent to clarify terminal syntax, debug scripts, and speed up the process of learning custom shortcuts. AI as a learning accelerator — not a replacement for understanding the machine, but a way to compress the feedback loop from confusion to competence. The result is a lightning-fast, distraction-free playground for web development and writing.

Plain Language
UFW — Uncomplicated Firewall

A firewall monitors and controls what can come into and go out of your computer over the network. UFW is Linux's built-in firewall tool — "uncomplicated" because it was designed to be manageable by non-experts. Enabling it takes thirty seconds and immediately raises the baseline security of your machine. Think of it as the digital equivalent of locking your front door.

⚠ The Noobie Trap

Trying to switch to Linux overnight with zero preparation. Check your hardware compatibility first — run Mint from a USB live session before installing. And back up everything before you wipe the drive. The OS switch is safe. The unprepared data loss isn't.

SECTION 02 · THE TOOLKIT

The minimalist stack.

To maintain a high-performance workspace, I swapped out resource-heavy corporate software for clean, focused, open-source alternatives. No subscriptions. No background telemetry. No features I didn't ask for. This is the current stack powering the LIFEWATER archive:

Terminal Emulator
Ghostty
A blazing fast, hardware-accelerated terminal replacement built for raw command-line efficiency. Opens instantly. Renders text faster than any other terminal I've used.
Code Architecture
Zed Editor
A lightweight, high-performance text editor with native tab layouts and seamless Git integration. Feels like VS Code had a sleek minimalist cousin who actually goes to the gym.
Web Navigation
Zen Browser
A Firefox fork engineered for tight security. Native vertical tabs eliminate top-row tab clutter — a genuinely better use of screen real estate for wide monitors.
Graphic Design
Krita
My full Photoshop replacement. Clean, powerful vector and raster manipulation without a monthly cloud subscription. Does everything I need for web assets and design work.
Knowledge Base
Obsidian
A deep Markdown note-taking vault with absolute cross-linking capacity to map out philosophies, article drafts, and system architectures. Where most of the LIFEWATER writing begins.
Data Transfer
LocalSend
An open-source, local network file sharer that drops files between devices without external servers. No cloud middleman. No account required. Fast and completely private.
Media Playback · The Classic
VLC
The absolute classic. Plays every local video and audio format imaginable with zero background telemetry. It has been doing this reliably since 2001 while every other media player has come and gone. Some things just work.
▴ The Pro Tip

Don't replace everything at once. Swap one application at a time and give yourself a week to adjust before moving to the next. The habit change is harder than the install. Give each tool time to become the default rather than the novelty.

SECTION 03 · ADVANCED RIGGING

CachyOS — the power user realm.

Once you understand the basics of the command line — once the terminal stops feeling like a hostile environment and starts feeling like a precision tool — the next logical step is the power-user realm.

Plain Language
CachyOS — Arch Linux, Performance-First

CachyOS is built on Arch Linux, which is a Linux distribution known for giving users total control over every component of their system. CachyOS takes that base and adds heavily optimised kernels — the core layer of the OS that manages CPU and GPU scheduling. The result is measurably faster performance on high-spec hardware, particularly noticeable in gaming and parallel workloads.

10–15%
FPS Gain
Immediate performance lift in gaming environments vs Windows. Hardware-dependent.
0
System Freezes
Rock-solid stability during extended development workloads and high-refresh gaming sessions.
Customisation
Full control of kernel, scheduler, window manager, animation profiles — the whole stack.

The Niri window manager.

I paired CachyOS with Niri — a scrollable-tiling window manager that fundamentally changes how the desktop works. Instead of letting windows pile up chaotically across the screen, Niri snaps them into infinitely smooth horizontal ribbon layouts. Swipe left and right across your workspaces like pages in a book. Every window has a place. Nothing overlaps unless you tell it to.

Plain Language
Tiling Window Manager

A regular desktop lets you drag windows wherever you want — which sounds good until you have twelve things open and can't find any of them. A tiling window manager automatically organises windows into non-overlapping layouts that fill the screen efficiently. Niri specifically uses a horizontal scrollable layout, so you're always looking at exactly what you need — nothing buried, nothing cluttered, nothing wasted.

My laptop stopped being a corporate data-harvesting node and became a highly specialised development weapon.
SECTION 04 · THE THESIS

The OS is the rig.

— The Side Quest Throughline —
SQ01 hardened the door. SQ02 designed the storefront. SQ03 built the bridge. SQ04 reinforces the foundation they all stand on.

The first three Side Quests were about the external environment — how brands and digital services present themselves to the world. This one goes inward. Your operating system is the soil everything else grows in. If that soil is contaminated with bloatware, telemetry, and corporate friction, every tool you run on top of it is compromised before it opens.

Migrating to Linux isn't a technical flex. It isn't about being contrarian. It's the same logic as the gym: you audit the weak points in the system, find the foundation that's leaking energy, and fix it at the source. Everything else gets better when the base is clean.

Whether you're reviving an absolute hardware relic or maximising a bleeding-edge modern setup, the open-source community provides total ownership over your tech stack. No forced updates. No mandatory accounts. No usage data piped silently to a server farm on the other side of the planet. Just the machine, the tools, and your work.

— The Verdict —
5.0 / 5 · Digital Sovereignty
Migrating to Linux is the definitive path toward digital sovereignty. Stop letting an OS tell you how to compute. Reclaim the machine. Reclaim the time it was stealing.
Match the inside to the outside. Reclaim your rig.
Much love, fam. — DeDe Online · DeDe Lifewater OUT ♥
↳ Synergy Notes for the Index

The complete Side Quest arc

↳ Next in Global Side Quests
05 · Coming soon
More applied systems work. More invisible weaknesses brought into the light.
SQ03