Today we know a large number of reasons why people love Linux even more than before. The Linux community is one of the main reasons to use Linux. Yes, a feature of Linux is the community. This may seem like a controversial point for new users because the term itself is very common at the moment. There are even managers for creating and managing a community. Let's take a look at the main key features of a Linux community.
The fact that Linux has its own community is quite normal. Finding something in common is also normal. There are a large number of users of systems like Android, iPhone, Windows, Mac. You can find support forums where people who use creative, business or financial applications communicate. People are first tagged with attributes and then groups are formed. When you download and try Linux, you automatically belong to the group of people who have downloaded and tried Linux. But the question is what kinds of people form within that large group of people.
A community is not just a group of people. They are like-minded people spreading some knowledge, experience among themselves. But most importantly, they provide a connection between different people. It is easy to identify similarities between them, because these users are working on the same operating system or application.
Perhaps you are struggling to understand how software works or you can't understand the signs of interaction in a Linux environment because they are different from what you observed in your previous operating system. Maybe you are not sure which desktop environment to choose or which text editor to use. When you and someone else work together to solve a problem and succeed, there is a moment of mutual appreciation and understanding.
Likewise, when you use software created and published by a Linux contributor, you are also participating. You may not think that downloading and using applications is important, but if no one downloaded and used the software, it wouldn't last long. These small, almost insignificant actions that seem to go without saying happen on a daily basis. That's why the Linux community is considered complete in the full sense of the word.
Just like a social network, every community has its own expectations and culture. You may want to join any community, but you also have the right to choose which one you want to join.
If it doesn't empower and encourage you to achieve your goals, technical or otherwise, then it's best to leave it and find something else. Thanks to the growing diversity of Linux users, there is plenty of room for everyone and new communities are forming all the time.
The fact of being part of a community is important, it's not so important what you do in a group of people. The fact that people benefit from the product that the community is creating drives them to create even more. You could say it's a perpetual motion machine and the perpetual energy it generates fuels the best of technology.