Procapra [comrade/them, she/her]

I enjoy various types of antelope…and Stalin

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  • 21 Comments
Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: April 14th, 2024

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    • Updates inevitably lead to things breaking sometimes. If you want to avoid things breaking as often, using something stable (like Debian) would help.

    • The benefits you are describing are probably because of KDE vs Gnome and not a distro thing.

    • Fedora does things differently than Ubuntu/Debian (mainly package management, but there are other small things). Because of this, noobs & intermediate users alike will get frustrated at things “not being how they are supposed to be”

    All that said, if Fedora works for you, keep on using it. I daily drove it for about a year before switching to other things.







  • I meant more that, when it comes to newer bleeding edge software, some of the bugs introduced won’t be as well recorded and people won’t know exactly how to remedy your specific problem. Whereas with debian/ubuntu or fedora, often its as simple as typing whatever problem you’re having into a search engine, plugging some junk into the terminal, and it fixing the problem 90% of the time.

    But I agree with your comment overall so have my upvote! :)


  • Tips for switching to linux:

    1. Determine if your hardware will play nice with linux. If you have Broadcom or Realtek wifi/bluetooth be aware that linux doesn’t always have great drivers for those. Nvidia gpus don’t always play nice with wayland.

    2. Certain anti-cheats for games just don’t work on linux.

    3. (might not apply to you since you’re in IT) Try to avoid using obscure linux distros or bleeding edge distros like Arch. You’ll run into issues and not many people will be able to help. Debian, Fedora, and Ubuntu seem to be the popular distros rn for most people.