The flexibility of the Raspberry Pi’s ARM processor means that it’s capable of running other operating systems beyond it’s default Raspberry Pi OS. Still keeping with Linux, you can instead install Ubuntu MATE, Pidora (a Fedora-based distribution), Lakka, PiPlay (a retro emulation distribution) and Arch Linux ARM. There are also systems based loosely on the Linux kernel, such as Android, Minibian, and Chromium OS.
There’s Windows 10 IoT Core, FreeBSD, RISC OS PI, Plan 9 and, remarkably, AROS – an Amiga OS clone. Needless to say, that once you’ve finished experimenting with one version of Linux, just as you would with a desktop version of Linux, you can hop to another on the Raspberry Pi and see how that one works, and whether it will work for you.…