Yeah, I’m just another one of those who has recently switched to Linux. And, as many, what I did was to go for a distro catered for beginners. I chose Ubuntu at first because I had briefly used it like eleven years ago at high school as part of computer class, and actually liked it back then, and, all in all, I do like Ubuntu’s current GNOME adaption.

However, I decided after a few days to move on to a community-based distro as it aligns more with my way of thinking (as well as for a couple of issues which were Ubuntu/GNOME related), and the obvious choice, having tried Ubuntu, was Mint. And I do like Mint, even more than Ubuntu; I especially like Mint’s adaption of the Xfce DE and I would definitely use it if I had a low-powered computer.

What didn’t quite convince me, though, was the limited DE selection available. While learning about all the Linux stuff I came to know about desktops, and I felt like, if I wanted to ever use a different one, yes, it could be installed the hard way, but I would rather have a distro that can be installed with my desired desktop by default, and the one that got my attention was KDE.

And that’s how I’ve ended up on Debian. Yeah, not your usual recommendation for beginners but… I don’t see anything bad about it? Like, yeah, I have Nvidia, but I honestly wouldn’t mind going through the hassle of installing the GPU’s driver through the terminal (and I haven’t even bothered yet cause I don’t really game much anymore). But, apart from that, I’m delighted with what I see. I could’ve gone with Fedora, which was my next choice, but I actually like Debian’s slow update cycle, as I don’t want to be bothered often with setting up my system again. I want something as close as “set it and forget it” as possible. Plus, it is also the one I have felt the most at ease with thanks to KDE indeed.

So that’s my story! It’s been an intense few days of learning, installing, deleting, and reinstalling OSes on my system, but I now feel at ease and will be installing my favourite programmes or searching alternatives for the ones I used on Windows.

Thank you for reading and have a nice evening!

  • slabber@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    If your server doesn’t rely on docker I would give FreeBSD a try. I’ve been using Debian for 20 years and moved to FreeBSD a few years ago. Now I can never go back. Not that I don’t like Debian anymore but FreeBSD is a true server system. Simple, fast and stable. And with their jails implementation (something like docker but less obscure) you can easily isolate your services from the rest of the system.