To fellow penguins, What is your distro?

teesh3rt@lemmy.world to Asklemmy@lemmy.ml – 103 points –

This may start a war in the replies, but let's see!

190

I use Arch btw.

Honestly it's just so good. The installation was a heck of a process the first time but it taught me so much, and no other distro I've tried has just worked like this across all my hardware.

Linux Mint, the vanilla distro with chocolate.

Mint user checking in. It's easy to use and I like Cinnamon. Only complaint is the lack of Wayland support.

Debian always

I recently switched from Arch to Debian. So far am happy with my choice. I had used arch for about 4 years beforehand but I eventually had enough of flaky AUR packages and decided to just build what I need by hand.

I am using NixOS but it's... difficult.

How so? I've always been interested in trying that one.

I was considering giving NixOS a go. What are you finding difficult about it?

It's mainly frustrating because the learning curve is steep for no reason. NixOS is not complicated at all in and of itself, but the documentation surrounding it is very, very difficult to make heads or tails of.

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I'm using Arch (btw) but I'm running NixOS in a VM to play around & learn it. It's kind of wild, it's not like any way I'm used to thinking about an OS at all, so I'm still wrapping my head around it. Super interesting though!

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Fedora KDE spin. I dunno how to feel about the recent announcement but from what I know, it shouldn't affect Fedora itself.

Pop!_OS is what I keep falling back to. It helps that I use a System76 Thelio and a HP Dev One.

This may be an unpopular opinion, but for anything that doesn't require a GUI, Ubuntu Server is my go-to. If I need a GUI, then it's Windows. I've tried Linux on desktop dozens of times in the last 25 years or so, and there's always something lacking. Most recently, RTX support in Steam. Meanwhile, I have Ubuntu servers with > 1 year of uptime, and it would have been more if not for an UPS failure. Right tool for the job IMO.

100th comment! tbh, i totally get this. using the command line is much easier and a lot less "restricting" quote unquote than using GUI tools.

Started out using Ubuntu since 6.06, tried out elementary OS for a bit, went back to using vanilla Gnome on ubuntu and have switched over to Fedora a couple of years ago

Iā€™ve been using Void as my daily driver on my desktop for about six years now, I can see myself ever switching. Also have used Solus, Arch, Endeavour, and OpenSuSe on my laptop during that time, which have all been good. But I still prefer Void, it just feels so natural to me now.

Simple: Arch for desktops and Debian for servers.

Arch

Which tiling window manager? I want to switch to something else, been using i3wm for a long time.

Try AwesomeWM. Or if you are determined to have a tiling only then QTile is good.

I think I tried Awesome before, I'll give it another shot, thanks!

Most of the time Iā€™m just using Plasma 5. But I had some great time with sway.

Wow, People are replying! That usually dosent happen on a first post...

You can't just make this post and not add your answer...

Welcome to lemmy :D

Thanks! I know the api madness is probably over by now (I am seeing most of reddit going back to full working order),

but i made this account when it wasn't, so why not use it?

Hobby: Arch Work: Fedora and RHEL

Im starting to lean towards Fedora, but this RHEL news is very concerning.

Currently Endeavour OS, but I mainly daily drive Fedora, because its the right mix between bleeding edge and stable (stableedge?) for me.

Started using Ubuntu almost a decade ago, never felt the need to switch since then.

Kubuntu 22.04.

I love Kubuntu. I have had to go back to Windows for some very specific gaming situations, but once Linux gets more support and drivers I will switch right back.

When I came back to Linux in 2020 as a non-technical user, I got recommended Manjaro by a friend. But I found it has issues and when I reinstalled I just went to Arch directly. I found it not that hard to install and use and it really serves me well. So I've stuck with it.

garuda. arch based and beautiful. uses the regular arch repo, plus their own custom one.

Gentoo, mostly. Some Arch and Debian testing here and there.

I switched away from Gentoo a few years back because I don't feel I have the CPU time to compile all the packages on my laptop. Now I run Gentoo on my Steam Deck because I need to customise the thing so badly.

CPU time has never been an issue for me, really. I am intrigued by Gentoo on a SteamDeck - how well does that work? I imagine a very tight thermal headroom gets in a way every now and then.

Gentoo on Steam Deck works great. The kernel must have all the drivers now. For audio it must use Pulseaudio/Pipewire for the speakers to work. Compiling Firefox just takes about two hours? I didn't time it. If it's not compiling then it has no noticeable heat pumping out.

I run about an equal number of Slackware and FreeBSD boxen.

Mint on my media box. Still Windows on my daily driver, mainly for gaming. I did try Mint for it and while I did like it, I couldnā€™t make the full switch.

Puppy Linux on my already-not-fast-2011 laptop. Many thanks to the Devs on keeping my machine alive! True miracle makers!

Arch Linux. Installed it 4 years ago and haven't had any issues. I tried several other distro's prior but there always seemed to be some annoying bug that would make me look elsewhere.

EndeavourOS, but only since a month ago or so. I used OpenSUSE Tumbleweed before that for over a year.

I've settled on Manjaro with KDE on my current laptop. On my next one, I'll probably move to plain Arch. Alpine is quite cool as well.

Gentoo on my desktop and Mint on my work laptop. At work I just need everything to work, so I don't want to have to deal with some build related issues.

Arch, or, well, EndeavourOS to be exact. Have it on both my Desktop and Laptop. It + XFCE cured my distrohoping

I'm starting in the Linux world, so, my distro is Linux Mint Cinnamon.

Arch BTW for my personal machine and Debian for my server

Ubuntu Server for my home-lab. Fedora for my workstation (dual-booted with Windows, as work requires Windows or Mac, and Microsoft Flight Simulator only runs on Windows.

We should definitely not war on this - all linux is good linux.

I'm boring Af, I use Ubuntu with Mate DE.

I would love to switch to Opensuse Tumbleweed, but I need Ubuntu because of some interactive board drivers that are only available for ubuntu... šŸ˜­

EndevourOS, running gnome and x11 for better gaming performance.

Arch for personal and Alma Linux on my servers, but have been playing with the thought of NixOS for a while. With the new Red Head changes though I think I'll migrate my servers to NixOS soon. Maybe my personal setup will follow after that.

Main desktop is fedora workstation due to the intel a380 and to get my gpu runnin out the box.

Pinebook pro has manjaro will be going slackware once i order the nvme adapter to install it there.

Old lenovo computer - testing and learning netbsd on it.

Overall im hoping to get good enough to just have slackware for linux and any of the 3 main BSDs on other devices.

Arch with Hyprland on my laptop and desktop, Debian on my server.

Fedora. Cause it's the distro of choice of my employer and I'm just lazy.

I used to run manjaro, but after some problems I decided to cut the middle man, and jumped to arch.
So now I use arch btw.

Been using Linux for the past 10 years and have tried just about every distro. I decided to stop hopping and have been on Fedora for the past year and a half. Fedora has worked great for me and I have no plans on changing it anytime soon. Also should add I use KDE fedora because I canā€™t stand gnome

I have a T420 running Void Linux, another T420 running Mint, a T430 running Arch, and a T16 running EndeavourOS.

My T420 runs MX Linux, but I've considered switching to Mint. Hows it run?

Arch. I've been running it on my laptop for the last 3 years, and I've only switched my gaming PC from Windows in the last couple of months. Really impressed with how much Proton has improved since the Steam Deck has come out.

Moved from Ubuntu as I was having issues with the WiFi drivers on my laptop, and both my systems have been rock solid ever since.

Is there a risk that my Arch will start slowly disintegrating if I uninstall Python? Because that's what happened to my Ubuntu 18.04 install.

It really depends on what software you have installed. Quite a few packages require Python to function, and removing it will prevent/affect their functioning. This is one of the main advantages of Arch though: you start with a bare-bones system, and build from there as you need. One question though, why do you need to uninstall Python?

I just kind of settled with Pop but something broke miserably and now in sitting on KDE Neon

Arch. Super happy with it. Been running it on all computers for a decade or so.

Ubuntu studio for it's real time kernel and music software. Connecting a MIDI controller is a pain and I only ever did music stuff few times with it. Now I use it for anything but music.

My other computer has just plain ubuntu.

Daily use: Linux Mint

Funsies: VOID

Only really ever used Ubuntu, I've tried a small handful of others but I find I have less issues with Ubuntu so I keep going back to it.

If you truly care about privacy, I would recommend to stray away from it. Try something like Debian if you still want apt without all of the canonical things.

Favorite? Arch. However I am using Ubuntu on all my server systems. Currently donā€™t have any desktop Linux systems.

Arch and Debian. In the future Iā€™ll probably move to something without systemd, but for now this is what I use. I donā€™t understand why so many people use Ubuntu and even fedora now with this REHL controversy. Why would choose to use a corporate distro when others are also just as good? Doesnā€™t that negate the purpose of using linux and free software in the first place? (This applies to popos, linux mint Ubuntu, and all those other Ubuntu OSes)

I started with Fedora, then gave a few looks outside, now when I use Linux, it's 99% Ubuntu/Mint 1% Zorin (to show the similarities with Windows and explain how easy can be for an old newbie used to Win)

Arch as a daily driver, Debian for my girlfriend and the self hosted stuff, Raspbian for the PiHole

Arch and it's variants, depending on when I feel like reinstalling again, currently testing the waters with EndeavourOS

I keep trying different distros, but I keep coming back to Mint. It's just the right mix of user friendly and customisable for me.

Pop!_OS.

To me it's replaced what Ubuntu used to be, a simple easy to use Linux Distro that is great for beginners. Granted I'm no beginner, but I still like the OS.

Arch on all machines. And I'll keep with it. I'm not interested in NixOS.

Debian since '95, (After a try with Slackware and RedHat each for a month or 2-3)

I run testing on my home devices (trixie now). Totally happy with it. (I really don't like the rpm based ones, even more so since IBM bought RedHat) Tried Ubuntu once, didn't know how fast to get back after the 1st major upgrade killed my system years ago.

I used ctwm since '96, switched to xfce4 in '18 (and use it as wm), ctwm is still in use for vnc connections on the rpi.

NixOS on two boxes (starting to deep dive big into flakes to try to automate how the separate devices are configured and apps installed, itā€™s pretty slick if you ever need to reload the PCs). I have endeavorOS for an AI test box since it was easier to get an arch based distro to work with the complicated install chain of Cuda and Python dependency hell. I have Fedora on an PC my wife uses with Budgie. I have a Debian box for my 3d printer controlling. I may move something back to Solus once they release their new ISO, I miss it. Iā€™d probably end up installing nixpkgs on it so I donā€™t loose too much functionality/package availability.

Gaming/personal project development gets done on my steam deck running Arch, work computer is Ubuntu.

Home lab virtual servers are all Ubuntu, I have some rasbian pis lying around, and whatever Proxmox uses for my three physical home lab servers.

I'm debating moving over to either Arch or straight Debian for my work computer, but I would have to basically lose a day repaving - so I'll probably wait for my next scheduled refresh to try Debian/Arch.

Do you ever find yourself getting mixed up on the commands that you need on Arch vs Ubuntu, for example around updating packages?

Sometimes, but I really try to manage both systems with respective Ansible playbooks.

Between that and zsh/oh-my-zsh command history is super easy to navigate to do what I need.

Fedora for me, what I started on. Want to try Slackware though.

Is Slackware still active?

I started with it in the late 90s and tried to keep using it for a long time, but I got tired of dealing with dependencies. Eventually I switched to Kubuntu on my desktop and laptop, and Debian for my server. They may have added dependency checking since I gave up on it though. It has been a few years.

It's definitely still active, Praise "Bob". Idk about the dependancies though.

Def still active and sbopkg with sbotools as the main gui to take care of your dependency needs.

I am running Ubuntu on my machines and whatever Docker containers if I need some other flavour.

Nobara on the Desktop, Pop OS on the Laptop and the Surface (needs a custom kernel though). I'd use Nobara on everything but I am too lazy to switch.

Debian or CentOS. But I do server stuff.

Kubuntu

"I was a windows user and am trying Linux, but I am not afraid of hiding the fact that i was once a windows user."

Not saying this is bad ofc, just saying this as a joke šŸ¤£

Switched my 15 yo macbook to Xubuntu. Now it works much better than vanilla Ubuntu.

I did the same with manjaro, though I split it so I technically can get back to macos if I really want to. Annoyingly that now means I need to keep an eye on the disk usage.

Switched my 15 yo macbook to Xubuntu. Now it works much better than vanilla Ubuntu.

I am using Rocky Linux 9 on my home PC and Ubuntu 22.04 Server on my VPS.

Fedora because they keep the packages updated. I could go with Arch, but the amount of updates per day is too high.

Debian and Alpine

Alpine for Docker containers and Debian for general putpose and sometimes also for containers.

I'm a Trisquel user. Though, I'm thinking of moving to Guix.

Main computer: Arch (BTW) because I am a WM user (awesomewm) and AL has no bloat to remove. Also because of the AUR.

Servers:

  • main server is a gentoo beast. I chose gentoo because systems was actually causing some problems and reporting a "degraded" status. OpenRC is really nice after years of systemd :-)
  • second server, used for backups: NixOS, for no particular reason. I might install Debian 12 on it one day.

Nix OS, because I use both a laptop and a desktop constantly, so having a reproducible environment is key

I recently just set up Mint on a virtual machine. I had the iso image and I knew how it's easy for me to get around, so I did it only to find the program I was looking for isn't what I thought it was. It's kinda my main go to for Linux work on a virtual machine because of how hassle free it tends to be for me.

That VM was made after I made the mistake of making a Liya one but not putting enough memory into the virtual hard disk.

I'm currently waiting to upgrade computers before I make the full jump since I already have everything set up just fine on my desktop, but I'm definitely thinking of starting with Mint for a general easy to use start or going to endeavourOS since I have some experience with that. (That's subject to change if I try more distros on virtual machines and find one I really like...)

As a long term windows users, I recently switched to kubuntu and Iā€™m loving the kde plasma desktop. I like the look and feel of windows but not the telemetry so kubuntu really is the best of both for me.

My primary computer: (NOT LINUX) Windows 10, I know, shocking. Laptop for programming: It's an old HP Pavilion from 2015. Linux Mint with i3. ThinkPad for fun stuff: Artix Linux. Big ass Cisco servers in my room: openBSD emulation.

Gentoo on my desktop and laptop. I also have an old thinkpad T41 that runs FreeDOS which isn't linux but is still awesome.

I've been maining endeavouros for a little over a year now. It's oddly easier than any other os I've ever run.

I have commitment issues when it comes to distros, but the one I seem to go home to most often is Endeavour. I could set up Arch myself, but Endeavour with KDE pretty much includes what I would want on my desktop anyway. Opensuse Tumbleweed gets an honorable mention too, I think their automated testing systems are a pretty neat idea.

Fedora, itā€™s running great on my older ThinkPad

Arch, Suse Micro os and Fedora silverblue. I would like to add gentoo but by beard is not long enough.

Gentoo's own handbook is very handy. If you're ok with Arch, you'll have no problem with Gentoo. And if you have questions, you can join my tiny Gentoo community here: !gentoo@lemm.ee

Mint, yet on my old laptop. Still on Windows on my main PC