for gratis or other reasons ?

  • Have you been a distro hopper ?
  • What is your favorite Linux distro ?

EDIT : Thanks for all the comments so far. Heartwarming really!

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    I think I originally checked it out after watching an LTT video on a gaming distro, because i liked computers and I was pretty good at them. Not sure if I was the problem or the distro but it was pretty bad. Still fell in love.

    Now I appreciate the open source aspect, but I still like it because I can do more with it and learn in the process.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    My laptop with windows 10 shit the bed, it would let me type in my pin but get hung up on the spinny loady wheely thing never moving past that. I used a linux liveUSB to rescue my files from the disk, and while I was using it I noticed how my computer did things like “still work.” So I switched! Actually had two laptops at the same time I had to switch too, the other would let me log in but was bogged down and barely responsive, ran like a top for years but now I’m upgrading to a framework. The framework can probably run windows but it would’ve been like $200 more and like, why? I might just run a VM of WatermarkWindows for the few times I need it but really the only thing I need works in wine well enough.

  • Chainweasel
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    1 year ago

    I stuck with Windows for as long as I did because of the widespread compatibility and ease of use, and I still use Windows 10 on one laptop that I’ve been using for 4 years because I just don’t want to go through the pain of switching everything over when I’m likely to just upgrade the hardware before long anyway.
    But I did switch over to Mint on my desktop and I’ve been shocked at how easy it was to switch. I haven’t ran into any insurmountable compatibility issues and flat hub makes everything a breeze.
    I’m super happy with the frequent updates and The cinnamon user interface is very familiar and easy to adapt to.
    That being said, I’ll never use a Windows operating system on a new machine or build ever again.
    Windows 11 is just trash.
    The UI changes alone left a bad taste in my mouth but you can undo most of them with a little bit of work, But you just shouldn’t have to.
    Then with the addition to advertisements in the taskbar and start menu I’d had enough.
    I’m over the top, just fucking DONE with being a commodity and I refuse to use any paid service that serves ads.
    Yes, Windows comes with most machines but it’s not a free service.
    And the option to stay on Windows 10 and continue receiving security updates on for a monthly fee is just short of extortion.
    My personal tin foil hat theory is that they purposely made windows 11 trash so that people would support a subscription based Windows service with Windows 10.

    • lemmyreaderOP
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      11 year ago

      My personal tin foil hat theory is that they purposely made windows 11 trash so that people would support a subscription based Windows service with Windows 10.

      I’m with you on that.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce
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    21 year ago

    I switched because I was sick of dealing with corporate garbage and abuse at the hands of Microsoft.

    It wasn’t the cost, I’ve always activated my Windows installations with gray-market keys bought on eBay for 5-10 dollars. Plus I’ve paid far more for open source software than I ever did for Windows and their proprietary trash.

    I had so many problems with Windows over the years. Fighting with drivers, fighting with software installs, fighting with the registry, etc etc.

    I also couldn’t stand how bad their spying was getting, how bloated and clunky their software was, and how much adware they were forcing on me.

    I finally vowed about 3 years ago that I would never use Windows again for any of my personal computing, no matter what I had to sacrifice.

    Turns out, I didn’t have to really sacrifice anything significant, and I gained far more than I lost. I would never go back to Windows now, especially with what is happening with windows 11.

    My main computer runs Nobara, because I use it mostly for gaming. I use KDE Plasma as my DE. Both work fantastic, games run fast and smooth, and everything looks so pretty lol.

    I use Mint Debian Edition with Cinnamon on my laptop and it’s awesome too. Almost never have any problems with it.

    My work allows me to use Linux, so I run Debian with KDE Plasma. It took a bit of work to get everything running smoothly, but I’m enough of a power user that it wasn’t too bad.

    My phone runs GrapheneOS, I’m on it right now typing this. Love it also, so glad to be off a corporate version of Android. GrapheneOS is awesome and does everything I need very well.

    I’ve used a ton of different distros. Different strokes for different folks. I’ve used Arch, Fedora, Zorin, Ubuntu, Lubuntu, Mint, Manjaro, Alma, and several others. Some were a fad, some I use for my servers, some I use for home lab testing, etc.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    Windows post 7 was and remains annoying and getting worse all the time. So I wanted an OS without telemetry and one that I could control the updates on. I also work with Linux a lot at work. I use Alma 9 for a LTS release. Don’t have to mess with it much.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    I listened to the wan show and kept hearing about the linux challenge that was going to be released and i was excited to see how it goes. A month before those videos came out I ran a normal windows update and it completely fucked my computer. I could recover the files but not the activation key. There was no way I was paying another few $100 so I thought I’d give linux a try. Mint worked perfectly except wifi didn’t work but that was fine. Reading about how to do things on linux reignited my passion for computers. It had been so long since using a computer felt new. I loved that everything was configured by a text file and commands could easily adjust settings without having to dig through convoluted control panel. I then distro hopped a few times but now I’m settled on nobara and I enjoy linux because it makes my computer feel like my computer.

  • HubertManne
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    21 year ago

    maybe sorta. I did not even realize there was a difference at the command line and was like. ok this uses this. Loved the nextstep workstations. worked at a place that was very unix and liked a lot of it. got very excited with macosx which was pretty much nextstep with a freebsd base and macs were always easier to use. Heard stallman speak and definitely agreed and I began to recognized foss and prefer it. Im still pretty practical though so use zorin os although if I had more time I would play around with qubes os and sourcemage linux.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    The freedom is great, and the fact that things don’t change out from under me is awesome — I can use a basic or tiling window manager while still running a modern system. Updating Windows or macOS = new “improved” GUI, generally speaking. KDE and Gnome also change, but it’s your choice to use/not use them, as it should be!

    Started with Red Hat in the kernel 2.0 or 2.2 days, because I picked up a book+install CD at a garage sale.

    Slackware on an old laptop got me through undergrad (desktop ran Gentoo, but I didn’t use it much).

    Switched to Debian after that, with a little Arch in grad school btw (not a huge fan — to each their own).

    Running Debian now (desktop, laptop, and SBCs), but my heart belongs to Slackware.

    • lemmyreaderOP
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      31 year ago

      Running Debian now (desktop, laptop, and SBCs), but my heart belongs to Slackware.

      Slackware! The good old days with Pat :^) (Yeah, that smiley is © Patrick Volkerding)

  • Captain Beyond
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    1 year ago

    I don’t care about Linux. I care about freedom. It just so happens that the best free software operating systems are built on Linux, so that’s what I use.

    I use GNU Guix System on my desktop, laptop, and server machines. I use LineageOS on my mobile devices, although sometimes I wish I could use Mobian or even Guix System instead. I do have a Pinephone with Mobian but it’s collecting dust and the battery is swollen so I can’t use it anyway. I also have a router running OpenWRT.

    I used to use Debian until 2019, Trisquel until 2014, and Ubuntu until 2010. When I was something of a kid I played around with a Knoppix live CD, which was my first taste of GNU/Linux.

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    The Linuxes are the bestest IDEs ever. They even let you run mini IDEs (vim, vscode, etc) inside them. Coincidentally, they’re also where a lot of server code gets deployed, so they’re a a good place to verify fresh coffee.

    I’m sure other platforms have caught up, but when I started out, *nix was the most accessible dev platform I could find.

  • silly goose meekah
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    1 year ago

    I tried pop in November last year. I’ve since tried nobara, mint and now arch. I hate it because many arch users are so obnoxious but the AUR is invaluable, I think. It’s a bit more work to setup, but with the new arch install script it’s really not so bad. Watch out for the partitioning bug though! You basically have to manually partition your drive currently, because of an off by one error.

  • m4
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    1 year ago

    Because compiz. No, seriously.

    I got to know Linux back in 2006 in a hackathon-type-of-thing at uni and they gave me a Ubuntu 5.10 CD and my jaw dropped with the cube animation thing.

    Ended wiping my hard drive trying to install it, finally could install it, tried XFCE for a time, went back to GNOME, was tired of Ubuntu and tried Gentoo and somehow could install it, with the GNOME3 drama moved to KDE, considered FreeBSD for a moment just to realize pkg/pkgsrc is absolute shit compared to Portage.

    Oh and it seems KDE went back with the cube for Plasma 6! Alas it’s still masked in Gentoo and who knows when it would be ready, but it’s a bit great I’m not the only one for that cube nostalgia.

    • lemmyreaderOP
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      11 year ago

      Oh and it seems KDE went back with the cube for Plasma 6! Alas it’s still masked in Gentoo and who knows when it would be ready, but it’s a bit great I’m not the only one for that cube nostalgia.

      Nice. Learning some more Gentoo Linux is on my wish list, but every time I find the first step too intimidating. Now that they have binaries since (half a year or so ?) I expected an installation to be easier. Maybe I should try it with QEMU or VirtualBox. Hmmm, actually, are there any VPS providers that provide Gentoo as image ?

  • daddyjones
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    21 year ago

    Initially I was just curious and I’ve always loved playing with new (to me) tech. Then I began to really appreciate various things about it - not least the high configurability. As I learnt about OSS I began to also appreciate that success of things as well.

  • germtm.
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    21 year ago

    initially i chose Linux because Windows on my laptop was way too sluggish. eventually, me and my family made a definite move to Linux because of the continuous enshittification Windows is going through in the modern days. Linux has become good enough for daily driving and even gaming that it just made no sense sticking to Windows.

    i wouldn’t say i’m fully out of the “distro hopping” phase just yet, but i’m certainly doing it rarely, once in, like, 3-4 months maybe. currently using Void Linux on my personal laptop.

    my favorite distro is Mint. yes, it’s a basic-ass choice, but it is the de-facto “just works” distro.

  • KaRunChiy
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    31 year ago

    Started using it because I was a nerd, still using it because windows cannot provide anything close to a sway/i3 style of wm.

    Also setting up a programming environment is dead easy, just install a package and you can compile your code within 5 minutes of a fresh install.

    and also the kernel logs actually make sense and tell me what I need to fix when the system breaks. windows errors are just a goddamn mysterious mess