I’m between distros and looking for a new daily driver for my laptop. What are people daily driving these days? Are there any new cool things to try?

I have been using linux mint recently. I have used nixos and arch in the past. Personally, linux mint uses flatpacks too much for my liking. Although, I might have a warped perspective after using arch. (the aur is crazy big)

  • @CalicoJack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    271 year ago

    For laptops, I’ve been using EndeavourOS lately. All of the Arch goodness, but with an easy installer that handles the DE too. It’s as close to “just works” as you can get while still having pacman + AUR at the end.

    I still love raw Arch, but I leave that for server installs.

    • ProtonBadger
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      51 year ago

      Same, I’ve used Linux since the late nineties and know my way around but I have other things to do. TW with Plasma/Wayland is great.

  • @krimson@feddit.nl
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    181 year ago

    Arch for many, many years. Absolutely zero reasons to switch. I used to distro hop alot back in the day but I don’t bother with that anymore. I need a system that works and Arch gives me exactly that.

    • Footnote2669
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      1 year ago

      Why distro hop from arch if you can make any distro out of it anyway lol I use arch btw

  • OSH
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    131 year ago

    Fedora Silverblue. But when switching I had to wrap my head around the differences in the workflow of doing things. Once youre past that it’s rock solid and had no issues so far.

    • @blotz@lemmy.worldOP
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      51 year ago

      I’m surprised by how many people are rocking opensuse in this thread. What made you go with opensuse?

      • @tron@lemm.ee
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        51 year ago

        I would say the benefit of OpenSUSE is that everything is preconfigured to work right out of the box, including btrfs snapshotting with snapper. Once you boot it’s time to download apps, and go. Very windows like for those who just want the system to work. Updates are one click.

        • @kylian0087@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          In my case not at all. But that is by choice. I always start from a server install. For me i like rolling as i do not get major version updates. And with tumbleweed it is very solid at the same time. Snapper and btrfs are also great aditions.

    • @space@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      31 year ago

      The only downside is that they don’t support zfs properly, and the package selection is more limited. The community repos aren’t always maintained.

    • @onlinepersona@programming.dev
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      11 year ago

      Until the kernel updates to something unsupported and you find out that they don’t keep old kernels in the rolling release. An amazing experience.

      • @kylian0087@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Never hat issues on my 10+ year old system. I did how ever with rocky linux 9.4. It is unsupported on my old dell r610s

        • @onlinepersona@programming.dev
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          11 year ago

          I had it on two systems. Some peripherals stopped working after an update on one system and the attempt to downgrade it to the LTS (Leap?) failed miserably --> Ubuntu. On another one the graphics card stopped working and somehow forced it to the LTS with a custom kernel. That worked until trying to upgrade it by two minor releases (X.2 to X.4? Can’t remember if it was 13.Y 14.Y or 15.Y). There were so many conflicts and messing around with the source lists (or whatever they’re called)…

          It was the most difficult system to update that I’ve ever had. YaST is great though. Best GUI for system configuration I’ve had so far.

    • @Emi621@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      21 year ago

      Wanted to try Ubuntu after using mainly Manjaro but I have only 4gb flash drive and the iso is like 5-6gb so I can’t install it. But so far I’m satisfied with Manjaro Xfce and prefer it to gnu

      • Optional
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        51 year ago

        That’s the universe telling you to put an 8GB flash drive on your holiday wish list.

        • @xohshoo@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          is it that big because of the snaps? It used to be (well after it breached to 700M CD limit) ~1.5G and AFAIK doesn’t include a lot more default software?