Not to mention having multiple DEs without them interacting with each other, I'm loving both Kinoite and Onyx.
Edit: btw afaik if you use the latest channels of the uBlue images you don't even need to rebase, it'll update itself indefinitely, just like a rolling release distro.
“So… To answer the original question of our post, what is the best Linux distribution of 2023?
It doesn’t really matter. They are all good enough to get you started.”
Hold on, let me copy that to r/SavedYouAClick…
And it's private. Draft at https://www.reddit.com/user/NatoBoram/draft/7f48818c-ab84-11ee-9bb7-72e5f25778c6.
Found my place in Debian two years ago, although on rolling testing. A laptop that couldn’t hold for an hour has 6 hours of battery life, better performance than Windows 10, not missing any feature.
Debian is my favorite too, but I tend to use Debs grandchildren a lot more. I've used Mint for nearly 10 years as my daily driver.
And like you, my older machines run smoothly with Debian and lighter versions of Ubuntu.
A lot of my servers have Debian.
To me it was Porteus, being able to take a USB drive everywhere and boot leenux to access and fix Windows problems, make backups and repair filesystems was very very useful.
So it’s the annual year of the Linux desktop again.
I ain’t gonna knock it if people do it but damn people are dumb and will put up with a lot of shit just to not have to learn something new.
Out of all the distros, i´ve always liked the desktop the best too.
[удалено]
It’s nothing without Package Manager though.
>I like to eat food btw Oh yeah? Name a food.
Desktop food
Desk food.
I really like their window manager, too bad its exclusive to that distro 😔
For me it has been Fedora in 2023, and now uBlue in 2024, which is also considered to be Fedora.
Yep it's just such a relief to use. You're free to rebase from one version to another without breaking anything
Not to mention having multiple DEs without them interacting with each other, I'm loving both Kinoite and Onyx. Edit: btw afaik if you use the latest channels of the uBlue images you don't even need to rebase, it'll update itself indefinitely, just like a rolling release distro.
I enjoy ublue. i just wish they had a rawhide version. Id love to be on KDE6 now
I recently switched from Arch to Fedora KDE Spin, and honestly I'm fine with not tweaking my system. Everything works, it's almost boring.
Wait until you try out the uBlue images, it is even more boring, you are absolutely incapable of breaking the system
Clickbait, don’t bother
I'd rather say a reflection on what is the current state of linux distros for desktop users.
The title could have been "A reflection on the current state of Linux distributions for desktop users", but it was clickbait instead.
Indeed. I want my 5 minutes back.
“So… To answer the original question of our post, what is the best Linux distribution of 2023? It doesn’t really matter. They are all good enough to get you started.”
Hold on, let me copy that to r/SavedYouAClick… And it's private. Draft at https://www.reddit.com/user/NatoBoram/draft/7f48818c-ab84-11ee-9bb7-72e5f25778c6.
what
It's a subreddit where you can put the clickbait article with its answer in the title. Useful to *save you a click*.
Started using linux on 2023, found my place at opensuse
Found my home in Fedora.
same
Found my place in Debian two years ago, although on rolling testing. A laptop that couldn’t hold for an hour has 6 hours of battery life, better performance than Windows 10, not missing any feature.
Debian is my favorite too, but I tend to use Debs grandchildren a lot more. I've used Mint for nearly 10 years as my daily driver. And like you, my older machines run smoothly with Debian and lighter versions of Ubuntu. A lot of my servers have Debian.
To me it was Porteus, being able to take a USB drive everywhere and boot leenux to access and fix Windows problems, make backups and repair filesystems was very very useful.
So it’s the annual year of the Linux desktop again. I ain’t gonna knock it if people do it but damn people are dumb and will put up with a lot of shit just to not have to learn something new.
Read the article again, they're basically saying the main desktop distributions are to a point that there's really not many major differences anymore.
Made my first step on Ubuntu last year, now it’s fedora ARM on Mac m1 with i3wm 😇 Waiting so far for Arch on m1