Let’s make this place more active!

So, title. Personally after trying out pretty much every major distro save gentoo, I’ve come back to Ubuntu because it just works and I can focus on my work. Did remove snap and install flatpak, but other than that it’s mostly stock ubuntu.

  • @[email protected]
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    811 months ago

    I’m on EndeavorOS. It’s essentially Arch Linux with very specific training wheels. I switched to it about a year ago and remain exceedingly happy with it.

      • @inbano
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        10 months ago

        Another vouch for EndeavourOS being Arch but with less hassle, I have installed and maintained for years both Arch and Gentoo and while I think those two are the best way to experience and learn Linux, I don’t have as much time anymore, so I was trying out fedora for a while (left because some package lagged just a bit much for my preference; Emacs and some compilers/runtimes mainly) I wanted back into some cutting edge rolling-release distro.

        I prefer Arch over debian testing and opensuse thumbleweed because of popularity and gaming, there is bigger chance that if a game has problems, these have been found out on arch especially with the steam deck technically increasing the user base of gamers on Arch.

        EDIT: NixOS sound interesting because it might be even less time commitment to maintain I think(?), but the initial learning curve would be more time investment that EndeavourOS is since I’m very acquainted with how to upkeep and Arch system that I daily drive.

    • mikael
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      211 months ago

      For how long have you been using it? Have you had any breakages?

      • @[email protected]
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        311 months ago

        For 3 days lol, no breakages at all. I’ve switched from arch after using it for several months but now I just want stable enough distro with latest plasma and btrfs snapshots without hassle and decided to give tumbleweed a try.

  • evets511
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    611 months ago

    Gone through many distros. Always end up back with Ubuntu as it just works for when I need to get things done.

  • @[email protected]
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    611 months ago

    Ubuntu Budgie is my main OS. Works well but if I install another I’ll give NixOS a spin. I like the idea of generally immutable systems.

    • @Voroxpete
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      11 month ago

      I really like NixOS so far. It’s definitely got some quirks, and trying to install anything that’s not in the repository is, by design, a real pain in the ass. But the general idea seems to work really, really well. It’s cool how a lot of tasks that are really involved on other distros just come down to “add this line to your nix config file”.

  • @[email protected]
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    511 months ago

    I’ve been using Fedora for the past couple of years, but have been putting some time into NixOS VM’s recently

  • @Hagarashi8
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    511 months ago

    Currently Arch with i3wm. I’m up to try NixOS after i’ll pass exam on monday.

    • chi-chan~
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      511 months ago

      GL on your exam.

      Same, also Arch+i3.

      I’m thinking about trying NixOS too. A lot of people are talkimg about it lately.

  • TanknSpank
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    511 months ago

    Ubuntu. Keeps it simple and streamlined between my PC, my servers and my EC2 servers.

  • @[email protected]
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    511 months ago

    Pop!_OS on my laptop for everything except gaming. Programming, media consumption, reading, etc. I am much more productive using their stupid simple tiling window manager.

    On my servers/cloud VM’s I run Ubuntu Server.

    On my NAS I run TrueNAS Scale. To be completely honest I kind of regret “upgrading” from TrueNAS to TrueNAS Scale. It’s less performant and the amount of issues I’ve had with their application setup made me completely abandon it and just run Docker on a separate computer, which defeated the entire purpose of installing Scale. I’m sure they’ll iron everything out over time and it’s not like the performance is horrendous, it’s just incomparable to good ol’ regular TrueNAS (based on BSD instead of Linux with great ZFS support).

  • @Eeyore_Syndrome
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    11 months ago

    Fedora Kinoite:

    Technically Universal Blue:

    I was on Fedora KDE since 32.

    But as of late, RPM Fusion drops the ball more and more often.

    Package lag time was breaking updates on my AMD system even. Unless you swap mesa/mesa-freeworld back to update…

    Because I like hardware acceleration and encoding/decoding -.-

    Universal Blue takes the pain away for AMD and Nvidia users alike. Think Chromebook easy but it’s Fedora.

    I’m embracing Flatpaks now. For things not available as flatpaks, I just export from a toolbox or Distrobox.

    I have a messy writeup here:

    I thank Steam Deck for making me realize immutable/cloud based image-Desktop isn’t scary anymore.

    • @not_jovOP
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      411 months ago

      I used Fedora for a good part of the last year, pretty solid distro.

  • HyperHysteria
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    411 months ago

    Ubuntu, it just works. Hardly notice any genuine issues with Snaps as well, but I also rarely use them.

  • Badabinski
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    411 months ago

    Arch Linux, for many years now. No DE, lightdm for login, i3 for WM, no graphical file manager, Alacritty + zsh w/starship for my terminal emulator, shell, and prompt. I’m extremely comfortable with this setup and have no plans to change it (except for a probable move to sway, once I can finally get a system without an nvidia GPU).

    • @skai
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      111 months ago

      That’s basically my setup, except I’m already on sway (I upgraded my GPU a year or so ago, and deliberately choose AMD for the same reason) and I went with greetd(-tui) instead of lightdm when I switched to Wayland.