Hi, I just want to share / get some opinion.

I started using Linux 2 years back. I was dual booting back then and after a year switched to Linux completely.

I started out using Ubuntu, hated it, installed Manjaro after a week and when pacmac broke the thing within 2 months, I watched a bunch of YouTube videos, read the arch wiki and installed arch. Things were going great except for some Nvidia issues (I am using an Optimus laptop) but utt was running smoothly. Then decided that I want to build a game engine and the nvidia issues were significant. So I read somewhere that Fedora has great nvidia support and I installed it and everything worked. I installed Fedora 39, and it worked. When Fedora 40 came, I upgraded no issues, Fedora 41 came, no issues.

But just a few days back when I had vacation, I decided my system was getting bloated and I didn’t manually want to uninstall apps, I decided let’s format it. But I thought… Arch might take up less space on my disk(1 have a 512gb nvme, and t 2tb hdd, but I like to put things like games and projects I am working on, on the nvme). So I installed arch and loving the experience. I installed Nvidia-open drm drivers and it just works.

TLDR: Is it normal to distro hop after being using a distro perfectly for so long?

PS: I used archinstall because I didn’t want through the lengthy process again. And archinstall works great.

  • milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    I’ve also hopped distros on a scale of several years at a time. Loved Arch before I was living on an awful internet connection; did Ubuntu until they messed with snaps; loved Tumbleweed for a few years, but the volume of updates was getting a bit much; nearly learnt Nix but a trial run of Home Manager went up in flames, then I realised multiple layered package versions wasn’t worth the ‘stability’; now Mint’s been doing the job nicely, but I’m tempted to try KDE’s new distro someday.

  • arality@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    Variety is the spice of life. I’ve used Slackware, Arch, Gentoo, Fedora, Nix, been on Debian the last few years. Been looking at setting up my own UBlue image. I really like the immutable thing. Do whatever makes you happy…

      • arality@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        UBlue is a tool the fedora team created to build immutable distros in a container. This is a list of official distros created by it. If you’ve seen Bazzite it was also created with UBlue.

        Immutable distro just means the root filesystem is mounted read-only. So when you do updates, they create another image of your filesystem with the updates applied. Then you have to boot into the new filesystem. This is called an atomic upgrade. So if something is broken, you reload your last image and everything is fine.

        • JackAttack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 days ago

          Thanks for the explanation. That sounds quite promising. I updated Ubuntu one time and it basically broke a python project environment to where I had to reinstall the previous os again. Then of course reinstall everything else too.

  • PushButton@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I distro hopped last year. Proud user of Debian for 15+ years, switched for Void.

    Amazing little distro, simple just how I like it.

  • kyub@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 days ago

    Distro hopping is fairly normal if you’re still relatively new to Linux, I guess you do it less as time goes on, because you’ll have a better idea of whether or not a specific distro is appealing to you or not. To be able to even judge that you have to try out some distros for yourself, of course, so you need to do some distro hopping in order to tell what “direction” of distro is best for you. Sure you can read about it or watch videos but it’s never the same as actually running it for yourself.

    • IsoSpandy@lemm.eeOP
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      2 days ago

      I had tried opensuse tumbleweed and absolutely loved the way it did things, my perfect balance between fedora and arch, but there were Teo problems that I couldn’t get over.

      1. Zypper is slow.
      2. I couldn’t get it to do parallel downloads packages.

      But it’s a great distro nonetheless.

      Also it has a similar problem with fedora that arch doesn’t. VIDEO CODECS. I don’t understand how the USA messes with my ability to play a video and I am seriously annoyed by it.

    • kylian0087@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      I mean I love OpenSUSE TW. Been using it for well over 2 years. One of the best distros I used. But I am slowly looking to try something new. Its all fun and games 😄

      • superkret@feddit.org
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        3 days ago

        The distro that cured my distro-hopping was Slackware.
        It taught me that you can do anything Linux can do in any distro, no matter how obscure, ancient or simplistic.

        It also taught me that there is no reward waiting for you on the other side for making your own life difficult.

        Went back to Debian knowing I could do it all myself manually, but I don’t have to.

        • kylian0087@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          For me it is just trying different flavors. They are all unique in their own right. I have not used Slackware yet. Might give it a go though.

    • PrefersAwkward@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      If distro hopping happens more than once a week, please stop hopping immediately and dial 911 as this is the sign of a very rare and serious symptom

      plays more upbeat music

  • maniii@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    NB: setup a NAS with either nfs or smb/cifs or fish/sshfs for your home folder.

    That way wherever or whatever distro you boot on your home network you can mount your home folder and relogin with all your data and configs in place. Replicate if you want local copies with rsync to avoid duplication and drift.

  • pirx@reddthat.com
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    3 days ago

    I think this is part of tge beauty of linux, you hop till you’re happy 😀

  • Ⓜ3️⃣3️⃣ 🌌@lemmy.sdf.org
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    3 days ago

    It’s normal if you feel like it, don’t care about others opinions too much ;)

    My opinion : far too many distros are « pet distros », a few are actually usable for servers, for desktop as a daily driver and do actual stuff instead of figuring out how to make things work/look pretty.

    • Telorand@reddthat.com
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      3 days ago

      The one thing I wish I would have learned in the beginning is that distro = opinionated changes to the base offering. Some are sensible, while some maintainers might add fluff that they like themselves.

      Seems like the ones that do minimal changes but still offer something novel are the ones that tend to last, though there’s obviously exceptions.

  • Übercomplicated@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    I had literally the same Linux distro-hopping track as you. I hated fedora though, and after one year installed openSUSE and Void Linux on my 2 of 3 systems respectively (3rd system ran Arch the whole way through). Now I’m happy, openSUSE is a great daily driver work laptop (I have it running on ancient shit, but it legit feels super smooth with swayWM), Void is my tinkering and personal programming laptop (broken right now, but I’ll fix it soon), and arch is for heavy loads (cough, gaming, cough). Everything works and is efficient (Void has given me ACPI issues, but usually works). I think I’ll probably stay like this for a while longer.

  • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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    3 days ago

    Yes, normal. It is good for you and it is good for Linux.

    Distros try different things, and it is good to be exposed to many of those. It helps to discover the most functional ideas and cross pollinate.

    Wait until you try non-linux FOSS OSes…

    Easier to distro hope if your data is safe elsewhere.

    • azimir@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      I had a three year bender with OpenBSD back in 2001-2003 or so. I even started building my own kernels and doing a tiny bit of hacking on the code. There’s all kinds of interesting tools and systems out there if you start exploring.

      • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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        3 days ago

        Nice!

        I am currently setting up a FreeBSD ZFS file server. Software installs are so fast I thought they failed. (OS installer needs quality of life improvemens.)

        • azimir@lemmy.ml
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          3 days ago

          We had a similar issue back in 2004 or so. Downloading a browser (Mozilla) was a bout 40MB. Normally it took about 30 seconds to pull it down on our University Internet. Then one day we were setting up systems and every time we clicked the download button nothing seemed to happen.

          Further inspection showed that it had many successful download in under 1 second each. Our IT network team got us linked up to Internet2. It was able to download so fast that the bottleneck was the IDE bus of about 40MB/s. The file was coming from Intel over I2 so we couldn’t even see it download before it was done.

  • pH3ra@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    I distro-hopped so many times I got so sick of change that I’ve stuck with Debian for 4 years, the longest ever. It’s a peaceful life.