yes i did a os one but i am wondering what distros do you guys use and why,for me cachyos its fast,flexible,has aur(I loved how easy installing apps was) without tinkering.

  • beleza pura
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    114 minutes ago

    from the comments, there’s a split between

    • linux as a tool: debian, mint, fedora, opensuse, etc.
    • linux as a toy: arch, gentoo, nixos, etc.

    i wish this split was made more explicit, because more often than not someone comes looking for recommendations for linux as a tool, but someone else responds expecting they want linux as a toy. then the person will try out linux and will leave because it’s not what they want, not knowing that there is a kind of linux that is what they want

  • @Peasley@lemmy.world
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    232 minutes ago

    Plain old Fedora.

    I know the hurdles, i know what to expect, and I’ve never been surprised by it.

    Immutable sounds nice, AUR sounds nice, NixOS sounds nice, but i am utterly confident in my current choice’s reliability and comfortable with its idiosyncracies. Everything i want to do works very well.

    If i had less time/energy or had to switch, Kubuntu would be my second choice. Less frequent updates and fewer creature comforts, but also very reliable.

    • @AllHailTheSheep@sh.itjust.works
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      115 minutes ago

      I’m in the same boat. I was a kde neon person for a very long time, but I eventually got tired of some weird issues I was having that I couldn’t find a fix for. tried fedora on a bit of a whim and everything just worked. Nvidia drivers were a breeze to set up, gnome is very nice out of the box and doesn’t take the configuring I’m used to on kde, and even just having gnome boxes pre installed is super useful and I get to skip the virtualboxes setup. very impressed with it overall. never going back

  • @warmaster@lemmy.world
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    115 minutes ago

    Bazzite, I want my PC to just work and not require me to maintain it, on top of that I need it to be game-ready and have good color management for work related stuff.

  • @474D@lemmy.world
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    21 hour ago

    Mint pleb on desktop because it’s stable and just works, bazzite on steam deck for installing my own games.

  • Atemu
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    159 minutes ago

    NixOS because it’s the only usable stab at sustainable system configuration.

  • @Hugin@lemmy.world
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    11 hour ago

    At work a mix of red hat, fedora, centos, and red hawk. At home mint debian spin. It just works and games run great. I don’t have time to deal with the red hat crap if i’m not getting paid.

  • ddh
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    1 hour ago

    Fedora Silverblue. It does what I need so I can get on with my life.

  • @otterpop@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    I just installed Pop!_OS 22.04, after finally ditching Windows 11 entirely. I picked it because it seemed easy to use, well suited for gaming, and popular with good support.

    So far, everything has been great!

  • thedæmon
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    12 hours ago

    I recently installed OpenSuse, I have been using FreeBSD mostly, but have used linux through the years. I decided to go with an rpm based distro and I’ve always likes the chameleon mascot of Suse. I’m used to Debian based linux, so it’s been a slight adjustment but it’s been nice and smooth. I’m running Tumbleweed right now and all my Steam games work, as well as my 3d Windows applications via wine. It just works* I am too old and tired to spend time tweaking anymore.

  • Dustwin
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    12 hours ago

    Kubuntu 24.04 because it’s a solid desktop and I have nothing against Snap. If it works then I don’t care if it’s a deb flat or snap. p PPAs were fun and exciting but I broke my system more than once with them back 10 years.

  • @PushButton@lemmy.world
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    43 hours ago

    No Void here?

    Oh well… I surely don’t use it because it’s popular…

    • Runit
    • Pkg manager
    • KISS
    • Up to date / rolling distro
    • But stable
    • @tomatoely@sh.itjust.works
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      I went into void as my first DIY distro, mainly because I wanted to mess around with window managers and it was a very good experience. Runit made my underpowered laptop boot into linux in like 4 seconds, crazy fast. XBPS package manager was always really really fast too. I like the fact that nearly everything you need is in the official repo, instead of having to delve into the depths of something like the AUR. I also managed to make a contribution to the repos with the help of the community on the IRC chat rooms which were very noob friendly. Overall just a solid experience.

  • @grue@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Kubuntu, because when I got my Vega 56 GPU on release day (August 14, 2017), I had to download the proprietary driver straight from AMD to get it working, and Ubuntu was the only distro supported by both it and Steam at the time. (Otherwise, I would’ve picked Debian or Mint.)

    I don’t love Ubuntu (especially how they push Snap), but I can’t be bothered with the hassle of reinstalling my OS.

  • monovergent 🏁
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    13 hours ago
    • Debian stable (w/ XFCE). No-nonsense, excellent community support, well-documented, low-maintenance, and runs on anything so I can expect things to work the same way across all of my machines, old, new(ish), or virtual
    • Just flexible enough that I can customize it to my taste but not so open-ended that I have to agonize over every last config
    • It’s been around for many years and will be around for many more
    • I often entertain the idea of moving to Alpine or even BSD, but I can’t resist the software selection available on Debian