You’ve gotten into an argument with a fellow communist about the best Linux distro. Right after arguing about your respective leftist tendencies.

    • alexei_1917 [mirror/your pronouns]@hexbear.netOP
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      14 days ago

      Wait, you’ve actually done that? I just tried to imagine something ridiculously sectarian that I’d do if it wasn’t just bloody counterproductive. And then when it made me laugh for half a minute straight, I posted it here.

      So, then, what’s the best distro? Obviously any real commie uses Linux, that’s a given.

      • haui@lemmygrad.ml
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        14 days ago

        Well I guess I was joking a bit but it would be in character for me to do exactly this and my friends would probably agree. ;)

        The best distro in my book i hard to say. I use many distros on many different machines for different purposes. My main tower for gaming, hacking and work is tuxedo os (basically kubuntu by a german hardware vendor i work with), business laptop is pop!os which is also gaming ready, one laptop for educating people is mint, my little lenovo hackbook uses lubuntu.

        So I guess, since they’re literally all ubuntu derivatives but I hate ubuntu proper, there is no best, just many great ones for different purposes. I did btw daily debian on my tower bit it was frustratingly backwards and i did run postmarketOS on my phone for some time which is awesome but not quite daily drivable imho.

        Whats your favorite distro?

        • alexei_1917 [mirror/your pronouns]@hexbear.netOP
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          14 days ago

          Honestly, you make good points. I was in the mood for “argue about silly nonsense til blue in face” when I replied to you, but, yeah, the thing about Linux distros is that there’s a different best one for different use cases.

          If we’re talking favourite distro of all time conceptually, antiX, hands down. If we’re talking daily driver I actually use, I like Linux Mint for that. Basic, yeah, but it Just Works and that’s what I want and need. Honestly, I think I’m a lot like you - I like Debian derivatives, I don’t have a good usecase for vanilla Debian though, but I’m not going to tell anyone preferring distros with a different base that they’re wrong or get all sectarian about it, that’s a waste of both our time and spoons at best and actively counterproductive at worst.

          I do find the world of Official State Distros used/maintained by governments interesting from a political standpoint, especially in AES contexts, software sovereignty this, saving taxpayer resources that, yada yada yada, but I’ve never actually tried using any and don’t have strong opinions on any of the actual state distros in question. Except Red Star, my opinion on that one is that “it’s garbage and the versions we have here in the West are horribly out of date, don’t use it.”

  • knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml
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    14 days ago

    You might be terminally sectarian if you’ve gotten into an argument about which terminal emulator is best.

      • Erm, akstually, Arch doesn’t fall apart every other day it falls apart every other month! Hmmph, you debian users brag about your outdated packages like you won’t need to update them anyway if you use it as a daily driver!!

        • alexei_1917 [mirror/your pronouns]@hexbear.netOP
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          14 days ago

          Okay, sure, every other month… Still way more failures per year than anything running Debian!

          Updates? Now why would I want to do that, besides basic security updates? The whole point of a stable system is that nothing changes suddenly! I don’t need up to date packages, I need a system that won’t break unless I do something stupid to it (and probably won’t break even when I do stupid shit to it)! And if you really need the latest packages, there are ways to do that, but most people really don’t need the bleeding edge!

          (I don’t actually have strong opinions on this. I actually did have something derived from Arch on my initial pre switch list of distros to try. Just happened to like one that happens to be based on Debian better. (I use pure Debian about as much as you use pure Arch, I guess. Lol.) But being sectarian towards Arch users who act like you is fun.)

          • Heh, well I’m still cool for using the bleeding edge! Guess what Debian? My packages break so yours don’t! Erm, why use an easy installer and unstable leap repo when you can manually go through installing (please forget arch-install/arch-based distros exists) your system and be left wondering why your fstab is broken! Heh, I just know arch is for the cool tech enthusiasts like me~

            (Me too, I actually used Kubuntu/Pop!_OS for a brief while before going Endeavour. For me, I wanted to have the flawed AUR, and since I was already trying to go further with KDE Plasma and Unstable Stuff, I thought why not leap to an Arch-based distro? I mean, besides the every month-or-so package warning breakage and learning to install multiple kernels because of… the instability, lol. It’s fun to act like a sectarian too, especially since I’m supposed to be associated with those Arch elitists if… they still exist.)

            • alexei_1917 [mirror/your pronouns]@hexbear.netOP
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              14 days ago

              Hey, manual installation might teach you a lot about Linux, but at least installing my system took less than an hour and I have a functioning system with everything I need set up! While you Arch people almost always spent over an hour and a lot of effort, just to get a TTY booting, and you’re still missing things even once you do get your choice of desktop environment and your graphical programs installed and running!

              (Tbh, I kinda want the AUR sometimes. But, like, I don’t need it, Arch has a reputation for being a pain and forcing you to really learn about Linux by causing you to constantly need to use odd terminal commands to fix problems, and most of my distro hopping urges in general are some combination of “think I understand Linux way more than I do” and “I don’t really want a new distro, I just want a new desktop environment.” And the funny thing is that so much of what actually seems interesting and new to me beyond just a different DE that’s shiny and new, is based on Debian. Lol.)