You could start by having /home on a different partition. So that you simply can mount it in your new system and have the same settings and files as previously.
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This would be a big help, and I used to do that. I've actually heard that this can cause some problems between distros though.
I am sorry but I really don't have any constructive advice to offer. I am more curious what distros you are considering. If you haven't thought about using Arch, please give it serious consideration because it is nice and lightweight. Yes, the install process is terse but it leaves you with a good system that you really know what's going on.
Sorry, couldn’t help…. This meme just popped in my mind!
http://www.quickmeme.com/img/c4/c4bef59cc926feccafd5c625a030ee194c620ca07dd9e96970dcab5193f7c12d.jpg
No worries. I haven'ttried actual Arch since circa 2008 (not impressed then haha). A couple years ago I ran Manjaro, which was fine. I am definitely partial to Debian/Apt based systems though. Been using Mint for a long time, but wanting to switch to Siduction.
Can't give you any "advice" other than to "just let it happen" -- you'll need to get those linux commands written on your forehead anyways. i.e don't backup anything, rewrite/reinstall the whole thing from scratch until you've memorized (at the very least) 80% of it.
t. Did this exact thing for a couple months.
I'm too old and tired for that!
I dunno. I like to have a fresh start sometimes. Take your documents, maybe just your fav config files, and plop them into a fresh install. Not everyone's cup of tea but I like it.
You're not going to be able to take anything for granted. Get a new disk, load out the whole new distro on the new disk mount your old disc and start copying stuff over. Services aren't just going to copy you're going to need the binaries and all their dependencies. Then they're dependencies dependencies. The only sane path is to do installs and then bring your customizations forward.
Can't give you any "advice" other than to "just let it happen" -- you'll need to get those linux commands written on your forehead anyways. i.e don't backup anything, rewrite/reinstall the whole thing from scratch until you've memorized (at the very least) 80% of it.
t. Did this exact thing for a couple months.