qaz, 8 months ago (edited 2 months ago) Fedora with KDE Advantages: Most software has a version for it, this is not the case for e.g. OpenSUSE. The software is also usually quite new (unlike Debian). You can boot into older system versions if an update failed so you’re never stuck with a broken system. It doesn’t push snaps down your throat unlike Ubuntu and comes with Flatpak by default. A very customizable interface that is quite similar to Windows 7/10 by default with tons of useful features. Not a point release like Debian that requires a certain level of manual migration to upgrade to a newer version. Downsides: Slightly less popular than Debian-based distro’s and thus has less info on it online. Rolling release so you will have to update very often. Linux Mint is mentioned a lot in this thread, but it’s one of the few distro’s I’ve never used before so I won’t advise in favor of it.
Fedora with KDE
Advantages:
Downsides:
Linux Mint is mentioned a lot in this thread, but it’s one of the few distro’s I’ve never used before so I won’t advise in favor of it.