E4 is my best start
Give some advice on chess openings for new players.

You could learn some opening systems like the stonewall or London. a system is a specific arrangement of your pieces and you can usually play the moves without too much thought about your opponents moves, especially at beginner level. that should cut down learning time

Well I recommend pyramid opening Queens pawn moves 2 square Queenside Bishops and kings pawn move 1 square oh and in addition kingside bishop and queenside knight can go in it

Stop obsessing over openings and focus on your endgames and middlegames. Only learn opening principles.
Absolutely true. Seriously, just google "chess opening principles" and that's all.
You need to understand some basic tactics before any principles make sense. Skewers, pins, forks, discovery and such. I like Bobby Fisher teaches chess for this, but there a lots of choices.
You can learn opening principles while learning specific openings. Scotch, Danish, Queen's gambit. E4 is most common while d4 is the second most common opening move so learn one opening for each starting move and try them in games. Later when you add more openings for these starting moves, you may recognize the newer openings as you just naturally played them using your tactical ability after your played games veered away from your memorized opening.
I feel one can go farther, faster by just getting a physical board and playing out the openings without commentary. Doing this you realize there are only so many choices and it will seem less complicated than it is. Which is great to start.
So you can read some text about opening principles, then play out some openings to memorize them and try to see how those openings use opening principles as you move the pieces on the board. Later after you have memorized an opening you can contemplate the commentary of some writer about that opening and get more out of it because you are already oriented.
Or that's how I think of it.
What are your top recommendations for solid chess openings for beginners? Looking for simple, effective strategies to start with. Share your advice.