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.

Samueru, (edited )

It pains me to say this, but voidlinux, though I’m still not in the stage of “this one is not for me”, it has potential and hopefully I can sort all the issues I’ve encountered so far.

I’ve tried multiple distros, and also used artix for a while so I’m used to not using systemd but man void is really another thing, this isn’t the first time I’ve used it, I tried it a year ago and gave up, recently I decided that I’m up for the challenge and began using it again, here’s what has happened so far:

Well right now I’m dealing with the pc freezing when quitting the user session, for some reason I need to exit i3 before logging out, otherwise the system freezes.

Also I wasn’t able to get a clean boot screen even though I had the typical kernel parameters quiet, loglevel, etc, it even prints info on the login prompt where I should be putting my username, though I managed to mitigate this a lot by passing a kernel parameter that tells it to use another tty for the boot messages.

file-roller is broken, I can’t compress some directories to 7zip, the weird thing is that it only happens to some directories and not all.

Though the very good news is that they fix issues very fast, puddletag was broken and they fixed it in like 2 hours after I reported the issue.

Edit: It is not just file-roller that is broken, it is all of 7zip on void, I can’t compress with xarchiver either

librards_sucks,

Fadora or ache are pretty good

tigerjerusalem,

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

brayd,
@brayd@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

Honestly everything besides Debian and Arch after distro hopping for years.

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)

Crozekiel,

PopOS and Ubuntu - really just found that I don’t like gnome. Nothing against it, I know some people love it but it is not for me. This would likely apply to any gnome distro, but those were the two I tried and immediately moved on.

Honorable mention: Manjaro because “it just breaks™” but it wasn’t something I noticed immediately and initially liked the os…

MrFunnyMoustache,

Manjaro made me lose some hairs in frustration… Not for me.

Crozekiel,

Yea… That’s where my hair went… It was Manjaro’s fault… 😅

pete_the_cat,

You are aware that you can have multiple DEs installed at once, right? Also many distros have multiple different choices for the default DE. I haven’t used it for probably over a decade, but I’m sure Kubuntu, the KDE version of Ubuntu, still exists.

Crozekiel,

I am aware the DE can be changed, but it was just an honest answer to OP’s question. I downloaded like 8 different distros and put them on flash drives and tried them all out and that was what caused me to move on. I didn’t have kubuntu downloaded to try, probably because canonical seems to treat them as entirely different distros.

ie, some distros have the DE options when looking at the download page or have you choose during the live boot which to use and include multiple in one iso. Ubuntu makes no mention of those separate downloads unless you explore their site a bit further than the download page. It’s a minor difference but makes a difference when you’re grabbing a handful of isos to try out, you might miss it and assume the one iso has all the options available when it doesn’t, or that it is the only option they provide.

As for PopOS I actually did look into changing to KDE and the popular wisdom at the time on message boards was that changing to KDE would possibly or likely undo most of the benefits of the tweaks and changes system 76 made. I don’t have any idea if that is even true, just what came up when searching a few years back.

pete_the_cat,

I get your reasoning, a lot of “re-spins” are hidden away on many distros download pages, but saying something like “I don’t like Ubuntu because it uses Gnome” is like saying “I don’t like Fords because they come with radios”.

Regarding PopOS it probably is true because it probably all GUI specific things setup for new users, anything system level wouldn’t be changed.

Crozekiel,

Yea, it’s definitely not a good reason to not like Ubuntu. I really never used Ubuntu enough to make a fair opinion of it.

EponymousBosh,
@EponymousBosh@beehaw.org avatar

I hate GNOME so much. To each their own but I don’t want my computer to look like an iPhone.

Crozekiel,

Dude. Same.

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.”

Presi300,
@Presi300@lemmy.world avatar

NixOS, this thing is written by wizards for wizards, not for mere mortals like me, I’ma stick to my gentoo, thank you very much

neosheo,
@neosheo@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

This is a first for me. I was able to pick up nixos pretty well but gentoo scares me

handleunknown,

Gentoo isn’t scary, take your time and play in a VM - you’ll learn to love it’s flexibility

Veticia,
@Veticia@lemmy.ml avatar

I tried arch btw.

But didn’t like it.

Moondance,

Every single one of them until I hit arch. It just seemed to click and I enjoy the rolling release.

eric,
@eric@lemmy.ca avatar

Fedora, as someone who uses mostly Arch and the AUR, I couldn’t get used copr, flatpak, and dnf. I rather just use yay.

slacktoid,
@slacktoid@lemmy.ml avatar

Ubuntu. I just don’t like how they do things. I cant even maintain a repo for the machines i host without putting aside multiple terabytes of space. So to me they cant even make it reasonably easy for me to help them and be self reliant on their ecosystem.

HotChickenFeet,

Its a meme at this point, but I tried to install arch. Ran into display issues during install and couldn’t progress. Gave up and did Ubuntu instead.

I know there’s supposed to be some helper stuff out there now to make it go smoothly, but don’t think I am motivated enough to retry ever.

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