I thought I was finally finished distro hopping after I landed on Fedora, but then I found Nobara and then the whole RHEL drama started so I went back to Debian stable but then NixOS caught my attention.
i just don't do distrohopping, it's a pointless venture imo. started with arch linux as my main desktop, never went back.
tried some things occasionally, but i already sunk the time learning all sorts of things that may not even exist in other distros, configuring my system and the DE (and other things like zsh and vim setup), so it's just a waste of time honestly.
i'm thinking of using NixOS instead of Debian (what i used previously) for my upcoming server project though.
Yep, tried a couple distros out and ended up on Arch for a year and was happy. Then switched over to NixOS and have been using it ever since, there's no way I could ever main any other distro.
NixOS was for me the thing that stopped me from distro hopping and re-installations. I just don't care anymore to switch to anything, everything works how I want and I can focus on using it.
I’m using Debian right now, and it has been the most stable, and battery efficient distro I’ve used on my laptop. I see NixOS a lot on here, and went to look it up. I couldn’t discern really what makes it good, so may I ask for your “review” of it compared to Debian?
Modern society is all about convenience. Linux can increase marketshare by being more convenient and digestible. Actually, I am in the process of moving to Debian w/ KDE Plasma as my daily driving computer, but it required extensive research on what my options were. Quite simply, there are WAY too many options all touting features that slightly differ from each other than normal end users struggle to interpret.
Formula is simple. More easy = more better. Make adoption as painless as possible, people MIGHT trickle in.
Yeah, Linux is just not that accessible tbh. I know maaayyyybe a little more than average about computers, meaning I know how to follow tutorials lol.
I installed Ubuntu onto my laptop because it was getting old and slow. Overall, I'm very satisfied with the speed. My laptop is fast as it was new. But, doing some of the simplest things is a nightmare to me. I spent an hour last night just trying to install AirVPN. Why do I have to go into terminal? Why can't I just right click and install? Then when I finally got it installed I realized there's no UI, so idk how to use it lol.
Given, I could learn. Nothing wrong with that. But the opportunity cost is low - I'm really not willing to give up that much for ? benefit.
My biggest problem is that battery life on my laptop was awful. I tried a few distros and they were all drawing 17-20W from battery doing absolutely nothing. Which means 4-5 hour battery life on an 90Wh battery. In Windows it gets ~10 hours.
I screwed around with it several nights in a row, but nothing really worked.
I'll run Linux on servers, workstations, and containers; but never again on a laptop unless it's been tuned by someone else.
I guess that's kind of what's going on with the Steam Deck, as in, it's already set up and configured for Linux so you don't need to make any choices or do anything especially, you just turn it on and away you go.
(Of course, you can install other distros and stuff on it, but I'd assume the vast majority of people don't)
That's essentially what ChromeOS is: a corporate-controlled distro that takes away a lot of choice but also a lot of the distraction. It works for some people who would've never considered a Linux laptop otherwise.
I'm just dipping my toes into the Linux world and searched up something like "Linux distros for beginners," and Mint with Cinnamon was on like five lists.
It's like having sex for the first time. Don't know what I'm doing, but I'm having fun.
I dont understand the analogy because I didn't get any. For me, it was like riding a bike or driving a car, I got a hang of it, but didn't know where to go and went wherever the internet/maps said was popular. Or when I first went to a buffet, didn't know what I wanted but started taking everything available in small portions and taking what others(friends and strangers) took.
I've finally ordered new hardware, last of it gets here this weekend. I've made a choice of a distro to start, but if I'm like everyone else here, it's just a start. 💀
Either way I'm excited to join the revolution. I knew a long time ago I would never continue with Windows after 10 turned into a disaster. I mean it always has its problems, but I never looked too far into switching because I was locked in with games. Since I knew I would never give in to sullying myself with 11, there was a ticking clock until 10's EoL date as a deadline.
Made the jump sooner than I thought. Can't wait to try it out for real.
Had a dual boot I tinkered with back when Ubuntu was on version 6 point something, whatever "Edgy Eft" was. Poked around in a VM a lil bit about a year and a half ago, can't remember what distro that was, but never dug in as a daily driver, since I mainly use the computer to play games.
Choose your desktop, that's the thing you'll work with the most and could get in your way the most. Any 'living' distribution with an installer that fits your needs and delivers your chosen desktop out of the box will do. You'll learn later if the distribution and community suit you, and if you back up your user directory you can easily migrate distributions without changing the look of your system.
I think these are good points - desktop environment will be the most immediately impactful choice; then once you're settled a little into the Linux way you might start making choices about the package manager, eco-system and community philosophy.
But as you said, take your home directory with you and switching or exploring a little isn't a pain at all.
Good luck! I've been using Linux on my main rig since December when I challenged myself to use it exclusively for an entire month. I only boot into Windows to play Valorant every now and then.
You'll pin down what you like about the underlying systems you experience, and then go hunting for that, just streamlined.
Like, I love Archlinux. I love the config files, how simple and straightforward they are. I love pacman and the structure of it... but I use Garuda.
So I know every cool default or awesome app that could help me out just by happenstance? Nope, lol. I like being surprised by features. With Garuda, I get both the system I like with the Ubuntu polish.... and... dragons. You can change the theme.
What a learned when I used to use Linux is that the biggest concern about a distro should be how up-to-date their repositories are and whether they integrate what you want instead of looks and whistles. User support for that distro is also a big plus.
Turns out distrohopping won't make fprintd work with my laptop fingerprint sensor or give me equal Proton performance on my (admittedly) low-end iGPU, so uhh...
I'm not that much into distro hopping. I first used Linux Mint and then switched to KDE Plasma. That's the one I'm using now and I feel actually pretty comfortable with my choice.
My rational was I like the package management style and raspbian. That's all you gotta do, just find some feature you like. You can always wipe your drive and choose another later.
Anyone ever heard about WireMin?
I saw people were talking about this on several lemmy posts.
"WireMin is a decentralized social network that is dedicated to full freedom. It aims to build the next frontier of social network enabling completely free speech across the customizable communities and End-to-End Encryption without data and IP collected."
Says on their website, and it can be download on Linux. http://wiremin.org/
Can't find the source code, or docs on starting your own server. Not open source or self-hostable are major steps backward imho
Also it says it's "for free forever" just like Discord lmao