Based KDE ๐Ÿ—ฟ

MazonnaCara89@lemmy.ml to Linux@lemmy.ml – 1931 points –
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What's the current reliable KDE Distro? I've been rolling with Kububtu for a while now, but Ubuntu's Snap mandate has been getting annoying.

I have been enjoying OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. It's a rolling distro unlike the Ubuntu and Debian derivatives, but the updates hardly ever cause problems and it's very easy to roll them back if they do. It also gives you a choice between X11 and Wayland, and Wayland is working well for me on Intel graphics.

I jumped into Tumbleweed recently and have really been liking it. Last time I used Linux with a desktop environment I was using Gnome and KDE was a lot unglier. Things have definitely changed.

Tumbleweed is pretty much the "official" kde distro

Not KDE Neon?

KDE Neon gets the latest package updates regarding KDE first but it is not official in any sense, as listed on their website. In fact, Neon is just a package archive built on top of Ubuntu that offers more up to date KDE stuff.

I have used the distro as a daily driver in the past. It uses it's own pkgcon package management system.

Fedora KDE Spin works pretty well

I can confirm. Iโ€™ve been running it on my M1 MacBook Pro and itโ€™s quite nice.

Natively or in a VM?

Natively. Only major blocker for me using it more often now is speaker support, which is coming soon enough (the M1 Air already has it).

If you want something Ubuntu-based I'd recommend KDE Neon, last time I tried it, it was great. I don't think it has snaps since it's made by KDE.

I'm using Kubuntu as my main OS and it has been very stable for me. You can remove snapd and install the deb Firefox repository. You should look up tutorials on how to do it, I did it and nothing broke

Most likely the best distro for KDE is KDE neon, but that doesn't mean that much.

I use it on Debian testing and am very satisfied with it, KDE has never been so stable.

I for one hope to move from kubuntu to debian with KDE, I assume that won't have snap shit or systemd shit, but I might be painfully mistaken right there, I haven't checked it out yet.

Debian does use systemd, but what's so bad about it? I'm just curious, I'm using Arch with KDE, and that also uses systemd. Never had any issues with it. Debian doesn't use snap by default though.

Endeavour switched to KDE as their main DE