DEV Community

Jordan-Tyler Burchett
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

Posted on

What is your favorite operating system?

What is your all time favorite operating system and what makes it the best in your opinion?

Throughout the past few decades there have been several different computer operating systems built for specific purposes. From MacOS, Windows, and Linux to iOS, Android and everything in between.

If you're like me some of these stick out above all others and one will be, in your opinion, the best operating system of its time or maybe even of all time. Let's talk about your first time seeing it and what you used it for.

Oldest comments (59)

Collapse
 
bbkr profile image
Paweł bbkr Pabian • Edited

Tricky question because for Mac / Windows / Android desktop is integrated part of the operating system, which is not the case for Linux.

All time favorite system? MacOS Snow Leopard. Unfortunately from this point macOS got dumber and dumber with every release. I really do not like iPad-ish look of current version, lack of Vulkan support, FreeBSD directory mess under the hood and poor configurability. But back then Snow Leopard was pinnacle of power-user friendly desktop.

All time favorite system under the hood? Vanilla Arch Linux. I was long time Slackware, then Gentoo user. So fiddling with manual builds is my game and i love Arch documentation and simplicity. My current setup is Arch + KDE.

All time favorite workhorse system? Alpine Linux. My choice for Docker base and absolute king of low footprint and processing performance.

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

I remember Snow Leopard and I agree with you that it was a very good if not the best Apple delivered OS. I myself have only read about Vanilla bur haven't had the chance to fiddle with it yet but Arch is doing some wonderful things for the Linux community.

Thank you for sharing!

Collapse
 
bbkr profile image
Paweł bbkr Pabian

Vanilla = plain. Just stock Arch installed and configured from scratch.

Collapse
 
dimitrim profile image
Dimitri Mostrey • Edited

Interesting answer.

You remind me of something that happened around 2005-2009 to big software companies. Management got replaced from passionate computer savvy 'nerds' to Harvard graduates with a business degree. Good for the stakeholders. Not so good for the customers. That was a time we had to buy a new computer every 2 years or we were hopelessly behind.

Because. Software giants began making backdoor deals with hardware manufacturers. A tit for a tat. And suddenly, the end-user experience became second to profit.

Maybe, just maybe, the exponential growth of the smartphone market helped us out. In this sense, my Acer laptop is 6 years old and still does a fantastic job running the necessary programming software. Even heavy duty software as PHPStorm.

The open-source community came to the rescue as well. Think Linux. Of course. And many many others.

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

Development should be about passion and taking pride in being part of something bigger.

On a separate note, as for people who decide to go to college congrats you guys but I don't think it's at all necessary to learn and build aspiring products. Now I'm not knocking people for going to college, any way you choose to learn and better yourself is great. Just along the way don't forget why you got interested in development in the first place.

I have 2 years under my belt with no degree. I felt it was more important to stop and focus solely on what interested me. There are several alternative methods to educate yourself.

Thank you for sharing!

Collapse
 
dyfet profile image
David Sugar

Indeed, Alpine is great for devices, too. Arch is especially useful for leading edge development. They have very current packages, and they build them with few patches, so it is a place to go to test and develop against the latest upstreams the way various packages were originally intended to be.

Collapse
 
eljayadobe profile image
Eljay-Adobe

I'll always have a warm spot in my heart for Commodore AmigaOS (favorite), and Apple ProDOS (second place favorite).

Collapse
 
cezarytomczyk profile image
Cezary Tomczyk

AmigaOS was brilliant!

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

Oh wow how did I miss this one?

I actually have never seen AmigaOS but just looked it up and I simply have to try it out.

Thank you for sharing!

Collapse
 
efpage profile image
Eckehard

We should not forget that the concept of an "OS" does not apply to all computers. First Personal computers like the PET2001 came out with just a basic interpreter and this did a good job this time.

Most controllers do not need an OS at all (though you can use one), they can just boot into the code you have uploaded. So, for some applications I really appreciate not to have any OS at all...

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

I like the concept of not even needing an OS and how beneficial that would be on microcontrollers. I think most of the world doesn't know that's even possible to do but we use this technology all the time.

Thank you for sharing! Happy venturing 🙂

Collapse
 
melsardes profile image
Mel Sardes

Manjaro Linux

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

Manjaro news alone is one of the biggest players in educating the public about Arch Linux and is definitely a great asset to the Linux community.

Collapse
 
thomasbnt profile image
Thomas Bnt

A classic, Ubuntu 16.04 and 22.04

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

I'm an Avid Ubuntu user myself but that's mostly because it's what my OS is based on, so I need to stay current on it for that reason. Have you ever tried openSUSE?

Collapse
 
thomasbnt profile image
Thomas Bnt

Nope never

Thread Thread
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

openSUSE is definitely worth checking out. It takes a little getting used to from Ubuntu but once you dive into it the usability is very similar and things seem smooth. It has a safe feeling about it though it has a smaller community so I'm not sure about it for things like gaming but as a daily driver for feeling like your data is safe.

Collapse
 
chaugiang profile image
Nguyen Tran Chau Giang
  • Running containers: Amazon Linux (ARM based)
  • Work: Arch + i3
  • Reading, games, videos, music: Mac OS
Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

I like how organized your response is, good choices. Most people use the same OS for everything but finding operating systems that best fit the task at hand a lot of times makes life easier whether it be for business or leisure.

Collapse
 
tailcall profile image
Maria Zaitseva

I used to be an avid Arch Linux fan. It broke sometimes when I updated it but it was fine.

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

Arch is making good strides but still has a way to go. I don't see them stopping anytime soon.

Thank you for sharing!

Collapse
 
mannu profile image
Manpreet Singh

currently I am using arch and I have no complaints about it

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

I need more explanation with it myself. I'd like to one day try an Arch based build of RefreshOS.

Thank you for sharing!

Collapse
 
darkterminal profile image
Imam Ali Mustofa • Edited

Linux Mint Cinnamon with Cigarettes and Coffee

asdjaksdka

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

That's beautiful 😍

Collapse
 
darkterminal profile image
Imam Ali Mustofa

Ty bro...

Collapse
 
rizmyabdulla profile image
Rizmy Abdulla 🎖️

Windows 2.0 😂

Collapse
 
jordantylerburchett profile image
Jordan-Tyler Burchett

😂 I respect that!