this post was submitted on 25 Aug 2023
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Good morning everyone. I've got the age old question of what distro should I use. I got started with Ubuntu and eventually moved to Linux Mint Cinnamon. I'm pretty happy with using it as a daily driver, and it's worked reasonably well with my NVIDIA graphics card. I enjoy a bit of the "it just works" I've experienced here, though there's been a few things I've had to address with light usage of the terminal; using the right audio out by default, and disabling HDMI video sources I'll never use. I'd say I'm probably somewhere in the beginner-moderate capability for use of terminal.

I've got Fedora, Debian, Majaro, Gentoo, Ubuntu, and Kali (not a daily driver) installed in virtualbox as VMs. Linux will be used as my daily driver and must accommodate occasional steam gaming. I don't want dual boot windows on my machine, it living in a VM is adequate for any one-off needs.

I think I'm going between Debian and Fedora, though I think Debian might be the way I'm leaning, as I want to get further upstream in the communities. I don't know how to explain it, but I feel a bit "bored" with mint. I think I'm eyeballing some of the fun stuff that exists in KDE.

This machine is my daily driver and used for work, so as long as I can get the basics in place to connect to my work VM through Horizion I'm OK. I do have a backup device to use for work in a pinch.

Laptop/setup overview:

  • 9th gen intel I7 processor
  • 64GB RAM
  • NVIDIA GForce RTX-2060
  • Generic style USB3.0 DisplayLink docking station
  • Secondary display link device
  • I'm running two 34" 4k monitors (3440x1440) side by side, another output on an HDMI duplicator running a 27" and a 55" 4k tv (,1920x1080) and the laptop display (1920x1080) is the 5th screen) so far working as intended, but I can't get only the built in display to run at 125% scale without affecting the others.

Should I be looking at ways to better customize Mint, or am I on the right path looking at Debian and Fedora? Are there other disros I should be evaluating?

EDIT: I think what I'm wanting is something that gets new features more frequently, yet doesn't become unstable. I feel drawn to the desktop eye-candy that I see getting featured with KDE desktops. I seem to believe I'm missing out on something, but can't directly state what.
Ultimately, I think I simply want to move to a more core/upstream version of Linux so that I get new functionality faster. I'm trying to find what I desperately need but never knew it existed.

EDIT2: Thanks everyone I really appreciate all the info and it's given me a better perspective on what to do next on my learning journey. It's fun, because there's so much to choose from and each has its own sprit.

EndeavorOS has been installed as a VM, and Fedora's KDE Spin in progress!

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[–] PrinzMegahertz@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I think people will need some more user requirements from you than „not as boring as Mint“. I have no idea what it is you want ans assume that people will just recommend their favorite distro

[–] confusedwiseman@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Very good point! I made an edit to attempt to better answer, but in reality, I don't think I know exactly what I want. I've seen a lot of distros labeled as beginner-level, but I think that primarily means that there's more capability around UI available to support configuration and package management. Am I limiting myself and what I can learn by staying where I am? Maybe I'm just in decision paralysis because I already could do ANYTHING what with I've got, I just need to figure out what I want to do.

[–] ipacialsection@startrek.website 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

If you really want to learn Linux, you can use any (actively maintained desktop) distro to learn just about everything. Beginner friendly just means the default software is enough to do everything a typical user wants to do, in a way that is likely to be intuitive even if they recently switched from Windows or OS X. Installing and configuring something like Arch or Gentoo can be a good way to learn more about how Linux works, and some distros like Debian or Arch are better as a starting point for customization than a beginner distro, due to having less pre-configured cruft to work around. But you aren't limited by using Mint, unless you choose to limit yourself.

[–] confusedwiseman@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

I think this might be it. I need to figure out where I want to learn more (there's lots of community support out there) and then just start having at it. I'm not limited by my current choice over a different distro in reality, though it may be easier to use something with less built-in once I know where I'm going. Or, I could get good at removing the extra I don't use, but depending on how much I try to customize away from their standard, that could get "entertaining".