Mine is Ubuntu, I love its ease to set up and use, I also love how well snap and apt work, the ux, and the win key to activity's feature.
What about you whats your opinion?
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Latest comments (24)
Ubuntu for sure
Zorin OS, it is Ubuntu based but i like its polished UI, also it works well with my lenovo laptop
Before Gnome Shell: Ubuntu
After Gnome Shell: Ubuntu Mate
Love using Elementary Os. good ux, love having multiple windows panes with various apps. Although some say its a rip off of mac os, its what im familiar with so im enjoying it so far!
I’m currently using Arch for now. I used to use Ubuntu for a while, but I just decided I wanted to try something new. So far I haven’t had any issues finding packages, and I love the i3wm
I'll repeat this until I turn blue in the face: I re-tool my personal infrastructure to keep the same distro as my employer and at the same version. I find it helps me at work and at play to not have to shift between vendor idioms, it forced me to stare
systemdin the face, and allows me to carry little nuggets of insight to work after I spend a quiet Sunday afternoon jamming on something at home.My favorite is Slackware. However, when I decided to set it up on my laptop, I had issues installing it to dual boot with UEFI. I ended up installing PCLinuxOS, which I have come to like as well.
I will probably go back to Slackware on my next laptop, as I don't plan to dual boot in the future.
Elementary OS is my favorite.
I was first an Ubuntu lover, then I've worked with Mint and it seems easier and lighter. I mainly use both of they, but I'm searching for an alternative distro to power up my next laptop.
Oh, by the way, I also use an Gallium OS at my Chromebook (I think most of it is Ubuntu with Xfce interface).
For personal systems, I preferentially use Gentoo because I'm really picky about what I have installed and how the system is configured, and Gentoo gives you a lot of control over what actually gets installed and makes almost zero assumptions about how the system is configured. I've toyed with Arch/Manjaro before, but really don't like pacman for a number of reasons.
Depending on the exact use case though, I'll also use Debian (often but not always Sid, which I've actually never had any issues with), Alpine (when I need a tightly secured minimalist system) or on rare occasion a custom environment produced using Buildroot when I need a highly specific system and don't mind rebuilding the world to run updates.
Your a linux genius :]