Arch Linux with i3wm
Fish, Alacritty, Rofi (dmenu replacement)
Arch Linux with i3wm
Fish, Alacritty, Rofi (dmenu replacement)
For my main computers, I've moved them all to Arch from Manjaro & EndeavorOS within the past 4 years. Though been meaning to try OpenSUSE Tumbleweed eventually. Haven't used OpenSUSE in over 10 years.
I have a laptop running Proxmox for my servers, which is debian-based but uses a modified Ubuntu LTS kernel. Great to use to try out other distros in VMs as well.
I've been using OpenSuse Slowroll basically since it was released and have so far been very happy with it.
Currently driving Fedora 39
Garuda on my gaming desktop, fedora bazzite on my gaming laptop. Loving both to be honest.
Gentoo, running pure Wayland and Pipewire, no X11.
which de?
Manjaro Gnome. It just works ;)
I'm a Mint Cinnamon guy.
Void
OS/2
Dude.
Debian with awesome at home. Fedora with cinnamon at work.
Q4OS, for five years
Devuan (Debian without systemd), stable (Daedalus) with backports. Been running Debian since 2000, Devuan since 2018. I am at a point where I just want consistency and familiarity in my setup.
Edit: as far as cool new things, I have moved to pipewire for audio and leveraging a selfhosted nextcloud for web based file storage. For a personal setup (limited users) I just installed Nextcloud office which is basically Libreoffice in a browser like Google docs. I am also using mythtv with an hdhomerun for broadcast tv. None of this is really "new" but new to me. The setup of these functions has been fairly straightforward for me and I appreciate all the work these projects have put to make the setup and maintenance fairly painless.
Debian Testing and Arch with KDE on the PC/Workstation.
Debian Stable on the server.
Gentoo desktop but I have to use it over SSH a lot of the time since I'm stuck on my work macbook
Fedora but I’m not loving it. Due to my hardware I think I’m limited to that, arch and openSuse.
? If you're hardware runs Fedora, it should run anything
Nobara because I am a beginner that uses his PC primaryly for gaming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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