:verified_2:防空識別區𝒔𝒐𝒄𝟶:redstar: on Nostr: gray I only tried Fedora briefly, as well as Silverblue. Fedora worked, but I just ...
gray (npub12h8…mz5h) I only tried Fedora briefly, as well as Silverblue. Fedora worked, but I just didn't like it. I felt too "out of control" and it seemed like they were really pushing for a "consumer" Linux distribution that emulated, as closely as possible, a Windows or Mac-like experience. Silverblue was very cool, and I loved the idea of atomic updates with rollback support. But, I couldn't get basic things to work correctly because everything was sandboxed and applications couldn't readily communicate with one another. Tumbleweed is kind of the "best of both worlds", from my experience---it's a traditional distribution with normal package management. Flatpak support is there if you want it or need it. And it comes with Snapper support if you use the default BTRFS file and partitioning scheme, allowing you the ability to rollback to any any update point in the event you mess something up or an update breaks your system (you can also make manual snapshots too, but it takes automatic snapshots before/after every update).
Published at
2023-09-25 17:15:44Event JSON
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"content": "nostr:npub12h88wrwwh99mjfzm8x9gx7989a07mqw7tynvvacx888eus4fh44q33mz5h I only tried Fedora briefly, as well as Silverblue. Fedora worked, but I just didn't like it. I felt too \"out of control\" and it seemed like they were really pushing for a \"consumer\" Linux distribution that emulated, as closely as possible, a Windows or Mac-like experience. Silverblue was very cool, and I loved the idea of atomic updates with rollback support. But, I couldn't get basic things to work correctly because everything was sandboxed and applications couldn't readily communicate with one another. Tumbleweed is kind of the \"best of both worlds\", from my experience---it's a traditional distribution with normal package management. Flatpak support is there if you want it or need it. And it comes with Snapper support if you use the default BTRFS file and partitioning scheme, allowing you the ability to rollback to any any update point in the event you mess something up or an update breaks your system (you can also make manual snapshots too, but it takes automatic snapshots before/after every update).",
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