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What's your favorite distro, and why? Nov-2015

11 pointsby pjbrunetover 9 years ago
The first distro that I used full-time was Fedora. That was a good experience. Until Fedora started pushing the &quot;mobile&quot; interface so I switched my laptops and desktops to Crunchbang. (My servers are now CentOS, which I don&#x27;t have any issues with.)<p>Since Crunchhbang is no longer maintained, it&#x27;s getting more difficult to keep up with Debian. The whole concept of &quot;pinning&quot; sources is a little crazy. There was a point where I wasn&#x27;t sure if my dist-upgrade was completely botched. I was able to get Jessie, but the UI is starting to degrade.<p>A good friend of mine seems to enjoy Mate + Ubuntu. It seems like a popular OS with a strong community, but I don&#x27;t really like the idea of Ubuntu using a weird package manager. I&#x27;m posting this because I&#x27;m at a point where I&#x27;m open to suggestions.<p>Will I continue on with Debian and the continuation of Crunchbang aka Bunsen Labs? https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.bunsenlabs.org&#x2F; Or will I jump on the Ubuntu bandwagon? Or is there something else you recommend that I should look at? I&#x27;m mostly thinking about my desktop system, because I have a feeling my next laptop will just be a plain Chromebook. FWIW I like to skin my UI so that everything is &quot;thin&quot; and minimal.<p>Also, this is not a high priority, but I would like a distro that supports Flash for &quot;TV&quot; shows. Recently my Hulu stopped working because Flash is deprecated or whatever. I followed several tutorials to fix my Flash support for Hulu and nothing worked. But as it&#x27;s time to overhaul my system anyway, I&#x27;ll just wait till I switch operating systems.

16 comments

mbrockover 9 years ago
NixOS. I&#x27;m not interested in any other distro except Guix, which is similar. I&#x27;ve used Slackware, Red Hat, Gentoo, Arch, Debian, and Ubuntu in the past. NixOS won&#x27;t botch your dist-upgrades; you can even Ctrl-C any time in the middle to immediately and completely abort, since upgrades are <i>atomic.</i> You can also choose to only download everything and only do the actual upgrade steps at reboot time.
greenokapiover 9 years ago
I&#x27;m on Arch with i3wm.<p>Arch has support for Flash, and despite its rolling-release nature, I&#x27;ve found it to be reasonably stable for a casual desktop user. Arch and i3wm probably also fit your methodology with regards to being &quot;thin&quot;, &quot;bare bones&quot;, and minimal. You may want to try Arch out, even if you don&#x27;t end up using i3wm.
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auxymover 9 years ago
Can&#x27;t say I&#x27;ve had a good experience with ubuntu on a laptop. Very buggy with sleep&#x2F;wakes. Often wifi and&#x2F;or sound refuses to work after a wake up. Lately it&#x27;s refusing to go to sleep at all when on battery but not when plugged in (!).<p>I&#x27;ve had good experience with both Manjaro (Arch-based) and OpenSUSE, though not on a laptop. One thing I have found important is to use a distro which has a good selection of third-party packages. AUR is perhaps to absolute best out there for this, OBS is also pretty good.<p>Honestly, for the pc I&#x27;m currently building, I&#x27;ll be running W10, with a few linux VMs for hobbies. One of the biggest irritants of every single linux distro I&#x27;ve tried is the f&#x27;ing screen going to sleep while watching netflix&#x2F;youtube&#x2F;web videos of any sort. I&#x27;ve spent many hours googling for a solution to this, apparently it&#x27;s one of the great technical issues of our era.
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15DCFA8Fover 9 years ago
I was used to run Arch Linux, living on the bleeding edge and on the constant moving and packages churning that a rolling release distro provides.<p>For some months now, I am using Debian Stable on my desktops, and the experience is being very interesting. I don&#x27;t use any apt pining, and just some packages from jessie-backports (eg: LibreOffice and Intel Video Driver), besides the official stable repos.<p>This distro is SOLID. My desktop runs very fine, and using a stable distribution means that it will keep running fine for months (years?), instead of that constant discomfort that a rolling release creates as your machine stability and usage potentially changes each day.<p>Of course, things start to stay a little old, but in the end of the day, it doesn&#x27;t matter for the vast majority of packages. And you can always compile and install on &#x2F;usr&#x2F;local some applications that you need more recent versions.
tvmover 9 years ago
I&#x27;m using Mint with Cinnamon on my main laptop. It works reasonably out of the box including rather great multimedia support.<p>I&#x27;ve used Debian for more than fifteen years and I wouldn&#x27;t go back, at least on desktop. These new distros made me terribly lazy.
stephenrover 9 years ago
You should probably specify that you&#x27;re talking about a distro for <i>Desktop</i> use.<p>I use Debian on a daily basis for servers, but I haven&#x27;t bothered with a Linux desktop since about 2005.
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archimedespiover 9 years ago
I&#x27;m using Xubuntu 15.04 (going to upgrade to 15.10, but holding off for compat testing for a week or two). I&#x27;ve gone through a ton of distros and I&#x27;ve liked this one the best.<p>I ran Arch awhile ago, got tired of things breaking, then switched to, in series, Linux Mint, Kubuntu, Ubuntu, and then finally Xubuntu, which I actually like the look of. I&#x27;m considering switching to NixOS with AwesomeWM at some point, but everything&#x27;s working pretty well for me under Xubuntu right now.
veddoxover 9 years ago
Currently running Ubuntu 14.04 LTS. It has served me well, but I am planning to migrate to elementaryOS later this week. (I want to try something new, and I love the beautiful design of eOS.) I&#x27;ve tried out Arch on an old laptop, and while I really like the total control you have over your (bleeding-edge) system, I find it would require too much admin work to use on my main computer.
brudgersover 9 years ago
I&#x27;ve been using Linux as my main OS for about two years. I wound up biting the bullet last April, going with standard Ubuntu, and learning the Unity interface. It&#x27;s actually pretty good...but I have migrated to Xmonad. The pain of working around a few missing utilities in exchange for tiling windows.<p>Love me some tiling windows.<p>Anyway, AskUbuntu on StackExchange is the killer feature for me. Beats a wiki or a forum all day everyday.<p>Good luck.
rayalezover 9 years ago
Personally, I&#x27;m using Ubuntu with i3wm, and I&#x27;m extremely happy with it. It was my first distro, it works well, both on my laptop and on the server, and does everything I want it to do.<p>I don&#x27;t have any experience with others, so this might not be an opinion you&#x27;re very interested in, but I thought I&#x27;d add my 2 cents.
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akulbeover 9 years ago
Ubuntu. Arch.<p>In that order. Ubuntu - getting things done. Arch - satisfying the desire for bleeding edge.
mkazizover 9 years ago
No love for Elementary OS? It&#x27;s based on Ubuntu so you&#x27;ll get to use most of the Ubuntu-related assistance on the internet, and it&#x27;s well near as pretty as you can get with Linux!
TheSpiceIsLifeover 9 years ago
Linux Mint on three laptops in this house, two running Cinnamon and one running Xfce desktop. Ubuntu package base. Meets my needs, hassle free, good community support.
crispytxover 9 years ago
Puppy Linux!
saywahatover 9 years ago
Debian sid. Rolling release like arch but doesn&#x27;t break when you upgrade.
dmanover 9 years ago
debian with dwm.