I’m currently testing Fedora KDE on a VM (windows host) before eventually switching over to Linux completely.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      52 years ago

      Any preferences on the distro? I’ve been enjoying Fedora but I’ve also tested Ubuntu and enjoyed that

      • @[email protected]
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        72 years ago

        Tbh youre probably better off on something like Linux Mint or something else Debian or Ubuntu based. Fedora is a good distro but rpms are a lot less common than debs are and alien does not entirely fix that issue.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 years ago

          While I would still recommend Ubuntu or Mint or even Debian, I have been using openSUSE for years and have never run into a case where I had to compile software.

            • @[email protected]
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              62 years ago

              I’m not sure why you are bringing Gentoo into it here. I mean that all the software I have tried to install is either available in the repos or available as an appimage/flatpak. Were it not available in binary form I would need to compile it - and I have not run into that scenario.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          22 years ago

          I’ll probably end up settling on Ubuntu. Thought I’d try a couple before making a final decision.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 years ago

        Ubuntu is doing an annoying attempt to generate lock-in and profits by forcing snap on everyone and making it annoyingly difficult to avoid.

        Consider one of the ubuntu derivatives (there’s a number of them, Mint, Pop etc) in preference to ubuntu itself, a debian derivative (KDE neon for example) or go with Fedora if you’re a business orientated user.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        I landed on openSUSE Tumbleweed about five years ago and still don’t see myself hopping to another one

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          But for real, depends on your use case I use arch on my dev machine and you get nearly every package in the AUR

  • @[email protected]
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    472 years ago

    Plasma. It’s the most customizable and you can dive in and shape it. It feels much more natural for me to jump into.

    I put xfce on older hardware.

    Distro wise I tend to go with Ubuntu flavors most because they seem to have better compatibility for various software and stuff I need, but I haven’t really shopped around too hard in years. Work is RHEL (and clones) and they make me sad.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      12 years ago

      I’m thinking of settling on Ubuntu for the same reason. It’s easy enough to get a VM setup and test other distros if needed

  • @[email protected]
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    412 years ago

    KDE is what finally got me to switch from Windows.

    Out of the box I found it a better user experience than Windows 10s desktop, but having it be stupid easy to customize and theme on top of that has made me never wanna go back.

  • @[email protected]
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    352 years ago

    KDE for me. As much as I hate windows, I like the floating windows, task bar and tray. KDE has that out of the box and lets me tweak all the little annoyances away.

    • Dandroid
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      212 years ago

      Of all the things I hate about Microsoft Windows, the GUI design is not one of them. The content of those windows is janky as all hell. But the floating windows, taskbar, and tray? Those are all great.

      • @[email protected]
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        72 years ago

        I love the minimize all windows button. It is so small and functional, I always use the KDE Widget that copies it, and IMO, KDE should use it by default

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Man i didnt realize how much better Wayland is until I had to use a provided setup for a few weeks.

      The fact that I can’t swipe to switch virtual desktops on xorg was enough to make me question why xorg doesn’t offer such basic things after all the years

      • lemmyvore
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        12 years ago

        How are you swiping, out of curiosity? I have windows occupying the whole screen.

        I switch workspaces with a keyboard shortcut or by clicking buttons on the panel.

          • lemmyvore
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            12 years ago

            Oh I see. But I thought such gestures were available a long time ago, I remember apps like Fusuma, and there was talk of adding them to libinput so that every DE could let the user assign actions to gestures.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 years ago

              Yeah, this is now using the libinput gestures. It’s mainly exciting, because it’s available out-of-the-box, even for non-techies and lazy people (me).

              With general technological advances and I believe Windows having similar gestures, it’s now also rarely the case that touchpad hardware doesn’t support multi-touch input…

    • qyron
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      82 years ago

      Back to Debian after a long hiatus and XFCE was my choice for the exact same reasons.

  • @[email protected]
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    182 years ago

    Xfce. It’s lightweight and looks great with a little bit of customisation. For me it’s the perfect balance between performance, usability and looks

    • @[email protected]
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      72 years ago

      Sway is a WM not a DE. So you create your own DE? Or, I see Regolith is integrating sway, I think with Gnome Flashback as with i3. Not sure if there are others.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        Yeah, I thought about not responding on the basis that Sway wasn’t a DE, but someone else responded CWM, so I figured at least if I bucked the system, I wouldn’t be alone in it.

        Plus, not everyone really knows the difference between a DE and a WM. And not everyone knows that a lot of people don’t use a DE. So, often times, people use “DE” and “WM” synonymously, not really knowing there’s a difference.

        (Not saying that describes OP or anyone here in particular. But there was definitely a time when that described me. And I wouldn’t be surprised if that described some folks who were browsing this thread.)

        Oh, but to answer your question directly, no I don’t use anything that could be considered a DE. I use “dmenu_run” from Suckless to launch applications. That’s about the only thing I “add” to Sway in my setup.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          62 years ago

          I didn’t realise that people use them interchangeably. I’ve got an idea on what a WM is and what a DE is but nothing super in depth.

          • lemmyvore
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            62 years ago

            A WM is literally just the window manager. It makes windows work and have a border and maximize and stuff but that’s it.

            A DE gives you a lot of other stuff: a root window that makes up the “desktop”, panels & widgets, notification area, an application menu, workspaces, window and workspace switchers, global hotkeys, the concept of a session and stuff related to it (things to run on start, or saving your session between reboots), a unified theme and fonts etc. etc.

            There are also programs that fall somewhere between these. For example tiling WM tend to fill the whole screen so they don’t care a lot about all the things I mentioned but they can integrate with some other stuff to some extent. Or something like OpenBox which includes a very lightweight desktop, menu and panel so I guess you could call it a DE but it’s all contained in one executable.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          I’ve really appreciated running i3 within gnome-flashback. I keep hitting things that just work, that I didn’t even realize I wanted. I hit the pause/mute button on my headphones when watching youtube and it paused… Things like ssh agents, hotplugging monitors and having it remember your preferred config, the main gnome settings GUI, the compose key, etc… I’m just not interested in reinventing all that, even though each individual step is usually not hard.

          I’m glad to see Regolith is making a DE with Sway. One day I’ll migrate from i3 and I may let Regolith give me a DE.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    In my (and my friend’s) experience, KDE has been notoriously unreliable. We faced issues like the wifi icon just disappearing randomly, the time thingy disappearing, etc.

    I have been using GNOME for around five years now (I temporarily switched to KDE 2 yrs back and reswitched to GNOME 3 months later). Till now, GNOME has been extremely stable for me. The only issue that I experienced was a memory (although that was fixed in subsequent updates).

    Hence, based on this experience, if you’re looking for stability, I would highly recommend GNOME. However, if u’r looking for more customization at the cost of less stability, KDE ain’t bad.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 years ago

          Garuda has some customized KDE desktop, I suppose you need to use the plain theme and look, that KDE gives support for. Garuda added many extras and some extra pannels… a bit messy.

  • Captain Aggravated
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    2 years ago

    For me, from most to least favorite, it goes:

    Cinnamon

    Mate

    KDE

    xfce

    Bash-only; no GUI

    doing my math homework by counting on my toes

    Losing three fingers in a table saw accident

    GNOME

    Edit to add: I love the “one newline in the editor is no newlines in the published comment.” The internet isn’t getting worse by the minute at all.