anthoniix,

Gentooo, the only reason I’ use it is so I could bring up systems on old architectures. Besides that it really isn’t worth it.

Whelks_chance,

KDE. Not a distro, but I can’t get on with it. Too much screen real estate used by flashy things, and everything moves. I want instant transitions not a shwoosh. It’s probably all toggleable, but I don’t want to fiddle with it for every install or release.

Flaky,
@Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi avatar

I feel like I’m a chronic distro-hopper sometimes, but no matter how many times I try, I just can’t settle into OpenSUSE for whatever reason. The OBS feels a bit more of a wild west than the AUR.

BiggestBulb,
@BiggestBulb@kbin.social avatar

Basic, but Ubuntu. It's got snaps which are slow and generally suck, plus Canonical

prunerye,

Mint, and anything else that requires PPAs. Last time I distrohopped, I had a rule that if I couldn’t install Librewolf in under a minute or two, it wasn’t worth the trouble.

Mind you, this was before flatpaks were big, but I also own a potato and don’t want to waste space on flatpaks.

WreckingBANG,
@WreckingBANG@lemmy.ml avatar

Fedora. Dont get me wrong it is a great Distro but i did not really felt at home when using it.

Carter,

PopOS and Manjaro are two I never liked.

MNByChoice, (edited )

Not too ick someone’s yum, and this ventures outside of Linux.

I dislike the BSDs. Great for getting pf, and not being a homogeneous shop, but just different enough to be difficult outside of one specific use case.

Gentoo was similar. It may be different now, but a pain on the Xbox.

Mint was too dumbed down and ugly.

Ubuntu is useful, but likely harmful with it’s constant pushes to commercialize everything.

Redhat is needed for work, but the commercialization drives worse quality. Documentation seems purposely bad to drive training courses.

(Yes, I like Debian.)

HouseWolf,

The first distro I tried to daily drive on my desktop was Pop!_OS because everyone told me it’s the distro you “need” if you have an Nvidia card.

I’m sure it works fine for most people but I just had A LOT of issue, weird audio issues I had to fix every other time I turned on my system, some games refusing to load properly unless I forced them into borderless fullscreen.

Then one day it just refused to boot, even tho I had booted into it that morning and did nothing more than go on Youtube for an hour before work, Timeshift didn’t work even tho I had manually made a handful of backups.

Went back to Windows for about 2 months before trying EndeavourOS and despite peoples warning that Arch systems will break if you look at them the wrong way, I’ve found it way more stable on my system and any issues I have ran into have been easy fixes.

cetvrti_magi,
@cetvrti_magi@lemmy.world avatar

After using Arch based distros for more than a year when I use any Debian/Ubuntu based distro it really feels like they aren’t for me, at least when it comes to daily driving. I still have a laptop with PopOS that I use for school, stable distro is a better option in my oppinion for that usecase because I use it twice a week (unless it’s summer or winter in which case I don’t use it at all).

UprisingVoltage,

Pop os. I just couldn’t use their desktop (even though I think it’s good, it’s just not for me)

boblin,

Arch: I need reproducible setups. Also bleeding edge is not for me.

I have to give credit to their documentation though!

mtchristo,

Ubuntu. The whole interface paradigm puts me off.

chitak166, (edited )

Fedora. Just feels like I’d be moving to the dnf ecosystem for no reason.

Lettuceeatlettuce,
@Lettuceeatlettuce@lemmy.ml avatar

ZorinOS. I tried to install it on my spouse’s computer with all modern, well-supported AMD hardware. Had nothing but problems, to the point that the computer was barely usable. WiFi broken, GUI was laggy, repositories were buggy. When I finally got the system somewhat stable, I didn’t like the interface at all. Styles were bland, icons dull, everything just seemed clunky and awkward.

For a distro advertised as a beginner-friendly and pay-for-polish system, I was very dissapointed.

Might have been a fluke, I don’t think my experience is standard for Zorin, but it was a really terrible first impression and I never suggest it to Linux-curious folks. Mint or Vanilla Fedora are my go-to for newbs.

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