• apprehensively_human@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I thought I was finally finished distro hopping after I landed on Fedora, but then I found Nobara and then the whole RHEL drama started so I went back to Debian stable but then NixOS caught my attention.

    It will never end

    • pimeys@lemmy.nauk.io
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      1 year ago

      NixOS was for me the thing that stopped me from distro hopping and re-installations. I just don’t care anymore to switch to anything, everything works how I want and I can focus on using it.

      • LucidNightmare@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I’m using Debian right now, and it has been the most stable, and battery efficient distro I’ve used on my laptop. I see NixOS a lot on here, and went to look it up. I couldn’t discern really what makes it good, so may I ask for your “review” of it compared to Debian?

        • pimeys@lemmy.nauk.io
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          1 year ago

          If you happen to customize your OS a lot, with NixOS you can define everything from one configuration: all your packages, your shell aliases, kernel parameters or for example the desktop wallpaper.

          You can push this config to GitHub and clone it to another NixOS machine and that one will have exactly the same packages, kernel parameters, shell aliases and wallpaper. Even the package versions, including all the libraries will be the same everywhere.

          You can even patch your tools from these configs, have custom kernels and go really crazy. When you commit your changes, they work exactly the same in all your machines. And on boot, you get a list of configurations, so you can boot to the previous config of your current changes broke something, go fix what you broke and retry.

          And, with nix the tool, your team can provide the flake.nix and flake.lock files in the software project you all work for. It will then make sure everybody gets the right versions from the dependencies, compilers, linters, etc. If it works for one, it works for all.

          Nix the tool let’s you try this out in systems like other Linux distros or removed. NixOS is an OS that is taking a step further and requiring you to define the whole system with Nix.

          Oh, and a sibling project Home Manager is great for reproducible dotfiles.

  • wheeldawg@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I feel this.

    I’ve finally ordered new hardware, last of it gets here this weekend. I’ve made a choice of a distro to start, but if I’m like everyone else here, it’s just a start. 💀

    Either way I’m excited to join the revolution. I knew a long time ago I would never continue with Windows after 10 turned into a disaster. I mean it always has its problems, but I never looked too far into switching because I was locked in with games. Since I knew I would never give in to sullying myself with 11, there was a ticking clock until 10’s EoL date as a deadline.

    Made the jump sooner than I thought. Can’t wait to try it out for real.

    Had a dual boot I tinkered with back when Ubuntu was on version 6 point something, whatever “Edgy Eft” was. Poked around in a VM a lil bit about a year and a half ago, can’t remember what distro that was, but never dug in as a daily driver, since I mainly use the computer to play games.

    But now I get to try it for real.

    • eldain@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      Choose your desktop, that’s the thing you’ll work with the most and could get in your way the most. Any ‘living’ distribution with an installer that fits your needs and delivers your chosen desktop out of the box will do. You’ll learn later if the distribution and community suit you, and if you back up your user directory you can easily migrate distributions without changing the look of your system.

  • haruki@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    Decision paralysis in a nutshell. If we choose something, there is always a better thing (that we think there is).

  • Lolen10@lemmy.fmhy.net
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    1 year ago

    I’m not that much into distro hopping. I first used Linux Mint and then switched to KDE Plasma. That’s the one I’m using now and I feel actually pretty comfortable with my choice.