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Yet Another Distro Recommend request

I have a 'spare' Dell Latitude 7390 (Core i5 9gb ) on this machine. My production machine runs Debian with KDE.

What might be an interesting distro for me to try out on my spare machine?

21 comments
  • just how “different from Debian” do you want to go?

    • staying mainstream – EndeavourOS or Fedora will give you a similar experience, nothing too scary
    • try out one of the immutable options – NixOS, Fedora Silverblue, Guix, VanillaOS
    • something a little more trimmed down – Void, Alpine, Slackware
    • play with the source – Gentoo
    • do a little learning – Linux From Scratch
  • 10/01 Second Morning Update: @cocolopez@lemmy.world The machine is spare for now, eventually, I would like to turn it into kind of a modern clone of an HP85/HP87 - Good plotting, Nice BASIC. Perhaps replace BASIC with Python once I am more comfortable with Python.

    But then, I -do- have a Steam account.

    Fun fact - this machine has a touch screen!

  • I usually prefer having any side machines running something more stable than the main one, as I'm always bound to use and mantain them less often.

    Good luck finding something more stable than Debian tho. Maybe something like LMDE, that just got a new version out and is looking great, or trying out an immutable distro.

  • If that's a spare, I would try chimeraOS, turn it into a "steam machine". You would end up having access to arch at the same time.

  • Honestly, just test out a bunch of different distros over the course of a couple of weeks (or months even). As for which distros are worth considering for 'playtesting', that's entirely reliant on your personal 'Linux Journey' and whatever you find interesting. Though, if I'd be forced to make a list, then it would consist of the following:

    1. Start off with Arch, Fedora, Linux Mint, openSUSE Tumbleweed and Ubuntu. (Debian is absent from this list because you're already using it.) You might even combine this with using different desktop environments on each; as this might have more influence on the experience than the distro itself.
    2. After indulging with the 'veteran-distros', there are some different directions you could go from there. Perhaps you could try a distro that
      • doesn't use systemd; the likes of Alpine, Artix, Devuan, Gentoo, Guix and Void come to mind.
      • is 'immutable'; the likes of blendOS, EndlessOS, Fedora Silverblue/Kinoite/Sericea, Guix System, Nitrux, NixOS, openSUSE Aeon/Kalpa, Vanilla OS and Ubuntu Core Desktop come to mind.
      • takes security and/or privacy very seriously; the likes of Kicksecure, (openBSD, QubesOS (even though neither are Linux distros),) Tails and Whonix come to mind.
      • holds a conservative stance in regards to software and doesn't like to enforce change to its users. This enables you to learn the intricacies of its system once without ever having to forego that knowledge as times passes; Slackware.
      • is unrivaled in terms of freedom it allows its users; Gentoo.
      • unshackles itself from GNU; Chimera Linux and (to a lesser extent) Alpine comes to mind.
  • 11/2 update: I have installed EndevourOS and will be playing with that for a short time, but I think Artix will be next.

    Do any distributions use the systemd-homed home directory daemon?

21 comments