EponymousBosh,
@EponymousBosh@beehaw.org avatar

I’m currently using Linux Mint as well. I tried Garuda out and I did really like it, but the rolling release kept breaking NVIDIA.

I used Ubuntu back in the day but it sucks now. Snaps are the devil’s work.

wgs,
@wgs@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Void linux.

I used arch for a couple years, then crux for over 10 years, so I though Void would be a great distro when the systemd drama occured. Tried that, and noped the hell out of it…

  • creating/maintaining packages is a pain
  • the dev team was awful with newcomers
  • system couldn’t handle more than a couple weeks without updates
  • it’s an arch wannabe that doesn’t admit it, making it a worse alternative
jeansibelius,

Ubuntu

warmaster,

I game a lot, so I need the latest drivers. So anything with a slower release schedule than Manjaro is a no go for me.

Benaaasaaas,

Ubuntu, tried to install vim 8 when it released, too bad they only update major package versions once every 2 years. Find myself some random dudes repo, great it’s vim 8, too bad it was compiled w/o python support… Installed Manjaro (arch based) and never looked back.

phpinjected,
@phpinjected@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Arch

Hildegarde,

I have liked Ubuntu based distros until they release a major update. They are aimed at beginners and they work fine for that. If you use one to the end of support, the updater will say that your software is up to date because there are no new updates.

You have to check the website to find out you’ve reached the end of support, and to get instructions on how to update.

That is an awful user expierence for beginnners, and a great way to have users using vulnerable software without knowing about it.

I’ve switched to rolling releases for this exact reason.

GenBlob,

Any distro that’s based on an existing one but changes or adds very little to it. There are so many dead Ubuntu and Debian reskins

Interstellar_1,
@Interstellar_1@pawb.social avatar

Mint, actually. I tried it and found it too similar to windows and not customisable enough for my liking.

SendMePhotos,

Wasn’t a fan of Ubuntu, RedHat, Debían…

I guess I’m just a Fedora person? I’m on KDE right now, usually Xfce. Idk I’m enjoying my KDE experience.

Mint was pretty smooth. No complaints.

01189998819991197253, (edited )
@01189998819991197253@infosec.pub avatar

elementary os. Installed it, and noped right out of there the same day. On paper, it should be great. Maybe the execution was flawless for macfans, but it was not for me. I do appreciate how they tried to make an easy transitional Linux for macfans, though, and I do not regret the donation because of that fact.

tigerjerusalem,

Anything that’s not Ubuntu, because it’s the “mainstream Linux”, so guaranteed I’ll find anything I need there.

janabuggs,

I honestly don’t understand why recent Ubuntu releases are popular. However, I enjoyed it in the early 2000s. There was another popular release a few years ago that had zero hotkeys enabled and I have never felt more disgusted by a release in my life. I can’t even remember what it’s called, it traumatized me hahaha.

0x2d,

i run arch on my surface

my dell runs kubuntu, but i plan to move it to arch as well (after i back up my data)

i liked it for a while and suddenly had tons of issues with snap, especially with firefox, and webusb breaking constantly on chromium (i use android flash tool a lot)

shortdorkyasian, (edited )

Ubuntu when they first switched to Unity. I had been running Ubuntu for 2 or 3 years at that point, but I was already thinking about switching to Debian at the time. I hobbled along for a few weeks on that first version of Unity, but I didn’t like what I was seeing. I took the plunge into Debian, thinking, “If I’m going to have to learn something new anyways, I might as well try switching.”

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