Kushia,
@Kushia@lemmy.ml avatar

Suse, every time I’ve tried it I’ve just been like yeah, nah after running into some weird issue.

daq,

Just curious what issues you ran into? Asking as a suse daily driver for about 20 years now, but promise not to proselytize.

Kushia,
@Kushia@lemmy.ml avatar

It’s been a while so I’m not entirely certain. I just know that they were unique to Suse and no other distro gave me the same problems.

01189998819991197253,
@01189998819991197253@infosec.pub avatar

Like SD cards suddenly being read only, then, as mysteriously as it started, they’re read/write again (sometimes while mid-operation)? Yeah. I have that.

pineapplelover,

Ubuntu. I initially downloaded it for my sibling’s pc but now that I’ve downloaded and configured all these things on their computer, I don’t want to reinstall a new OS and reconfigure and download everything again.

craigevil,

Over the years I have tried most mainstream distros. I have never seen a reason to use anything other than Debian. Never had it break due to upgrading, I have never tried Nix, Alpine, Gentoo, or Slackware, not many other others I haven’t tried since I started using Linux in 2000.

Stewbs,
@Stewbs@lemmy.world avatar

Vanilla OS. I loved the idea of having access to so many packaging formats and package managers at my fingertips but maintaining the system, managing everything and keeping in mind all the things that I’m doing was just too much work for me when I just wanted a system that I can use without any hassle. I know immutable distros are quite the buzz these days but it just isn’t for me. That was also the time when I was trying to find an Ubuntu based vanilla GNOME distro

helpmyusernamewontfi,

Tried Vanilla OS and immediatly screamed in my head “what the f**k??” when trying to access an encrypted hard drive.

LUKS was stripped for some very odd reason

Stewbs,
@Stewbs@lemmy.world avatar

iirc the devs have added Disk Encryption support and it’ll ship in the next release (Orchid). I can imagine how confusing and frustrating that must’ve been!

Maybe I’ll give Vanilla OS another try when Orchid releases

SpaceCadet, (edited )
@SpaceCadet@feddit.nl avatar

I ditched Ubuntu LTS for my homelab virtual machines around 20.04 when they started to push snaps, netplan and cloud-init, meaning I would have to spend a significant amount of effort redoing my bootstrap scripts for no good reason and learning skills that are only applicable in the Ubuntu ecosystem. I went with debian stable instead, and was left wondering why I hadn’t done that sooner. It’s like Ubuntu without all the weirdness.

Gutless2615,

Linux mint waaaaaaay back when it first launched.

danielfgom,
@danielfgom@lemmy.world avatar

Manjaro. Because it blank screened in the first update after installation. Never touched it again.

popekingjoe,
@popekingjoe@lemmy.world avatar

I wish I had learned that quickly. I dealt with it for like four months before just going straight Arch.

s0phia,
@s0phia@lemmy.world avatar

Any distro that uses apt. I’m ok with Fedora and Arch.

ultra,

MicroOS. I didn’t switch from losedows to still have my PC restart on me while I was working. Also, it kinda broke and was annoying to configure, and had way too little documentation.

BCsven,

Did you use this tool ? Simplifies ignition/combustion opensuse.github.io/fuel-ignition/edit

ultra,

Isn’t that just for the initial install? I was talking about post-install configuration

BCsven,

If you scroll to the bottom in the combustion section you add packages you want, and custom scripts. OpenSUSE also haa auto yast for cloning your system and applying it to another machine

anothermember,

One that might be controversial: OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. I still have a lot of respect for this distro and I really wanted to like it but it’s just not for me. It’s the fact that major updates could occur any day of the week, which could be time-consuming to install or they could change the features of the OS. It always presented a dilemma of whether to hold back updates which might include holding back critical updates.

So rolling distros aren’t for me, everyone expects to run in to some occasional issues with Arch, but TW puts a lot of emphasis on testing and reliability, so I thought it might be for me. But the reality is I much prefer the release cycle and philosophy of Fedora, I think that strikes the best balance.

BCsven,

Slo Roll is tumbleweed with a slower cycle

anothermember,

That didn’t exist when I tried TW, but that’s something I’ll at least try out on a second machine at some point.

hardcoreufo, (edited )

Ubuntu - Loved it in 2006-2012ish but I jumped ship when Amazon appeared in search. Great place to start my Linux journey at the time.

Manjaro - Only distro to ever break entirely on me. I didn’t care enough to try and figure out why.

Tried endeavor and stock arch but they weren’t my cup of tea. No real issues with them though.

Fedora - I liked for a few years but abandoned after the RHEL drama this summer. Seems to be going the way of Ubuntu. Maybe that’s just my opinion.

I use and like Solus a lot but they didn’t update anything for 2 years until this summer. I use it on my gaming PC and an old laptop for web browsing but nothing important. It’s always been solid for me, I just worry about it going extinct. They do have an updated road map and seem re-energized though. I also think it’s a good beginner distro because you don’t have to dive into terminal much, and a good distro if you are a pro, but kind of bad if you are an intermediate user because there aren’t a ton of resources on it that bigger distros have.

I mostly use Debian these days. Stable on my server. Testing on everything else. I don’t see me abandoning it anytime soon.

Draconic_NEO,
@Draconic_NEO@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Ubuntu, because snaps break shit and don’t work right a lot of the time, also they left people hanging with 32 bit support which isn’t great (for being a Legacy OS for weak computers it’s not a great look for them, or all the Linux distros that followed them).

There were a lot of problems with Fedora and CentOS, none of them as bad as Ubuntu though. Most were either instability or software availability due to lacking RPM versions of the software I needed.

Arch itself hasn’t given me many problems but it is ideologically problematic for a lot of reasons (mainly the elitism) and it is also a rolling release which isn’t great if you don’t like being a guinea pig and getting software before all the bugs have been ironed out.

mlg,
@mlg@lemmy.world avatar

Arch: Arch

Ubuntu (and downstreams): Canonical

Enjoying Fedora. Find Debian (and downstreams) pretty solid as well.

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

You find Canonical worse than Red Hat?

arjache,

NixOS. If I’m going to invest that much effort to configure a system I don’t want to have to put up with systemd.

Aman9das, (edited )

Same here. I really wanted to use it but it doesn’t offer much over Universal Blue

If i really need reproducibility I’ll use nix on my home

brian,

I’ve found nixos is perfect for me since I like how precisely I can configure it.

Oddly enough, I’ve had a decent chunk of my only barely technical friend group switch to it for the opposite reason. They all just copypaste snippets of config between each other, and if something breaks they just go back a revision. I doubt any of them spend much time configuring anything. It really is the perfect idiot proof distro and I don’t normally see people talking about that side of it

coolin,

Yeah, I think Nix is a good concept but I feel like 99% of the config work could be managed by the OS itself and a GUI to change everything else. I also feel like flakes should be the default, not this weird multiple systems thing they have. I also wish most apps would have a sandbox built in, because nix apps would then rival flatpak and, if ported to Windows, become a universal package manager. Overall good concept but not there yet.

oresafa, (edited )

Ubuntu Reason : Canonical

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