this post was submitted on 15 Dec 2024
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I am considering moving away from Ubuntu, but I haven't tried other distributions for years. I started on Linux Mint Cinnamon back in 2012, but switched to Ubuntu when I built my current PC in 2020 because I wanted more up-to-date packages. Now I am faced with needing to replace my SSD which gives me reason enough to install a new distro. I have an AMD Ryzen 7 2700X with 32G of RAM and an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060, so I would need something that plays nicely with nvidia. I routinely use libreoffice, digikam, gimp, virtualbox, bambu studio, sublime text, filezilla, thunderbird, minecraft, steam, Open WebUI and Stable Diffusion (Automatic1111). I liked Ubuntu because it was familiar, fairly easy to customize, and everything was kept fairly well up to date. I am not a big fan of snap, and I would prefer a more logical and unified package management system. I was wondering if you all had some recommendations for me. Thanks

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I've been mostly happy with Bazzite (Fedora based) but sometimes the immutability aspect can be frustrating. I might say any old distro with a regular Timeshift backup is good enough. OP already said they tried Mint, which works well with Timeshift, and I don't know if it's improved with it's update frequency.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Bazzite drive me nuts. It's pretty good out of the box but I had to do some crazy shit to make stuff work for my friend that's just starting on Linux.

I measured it, I was able to install like 2GB worth of Arch updates in the time it took to rpm-ostree kargs --append. Waiting 5 minutes to install a tiny <1MB utility package gets annoying fast. It's nice to be able to just tell my friend to boot the last generation though. Tradeoffs.

It runs great otherwise though, I see the appeal especially for new users and fixed hardware like the handhelds. Just works.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

Not sure I've seen the same latency with installing things but I've also layered very little. Doing things the immutable way is definitely more challenging but I don't mind the challenge. I think I have more fun configuring than actually using my system.