Fedora Silverblue. But since Fedora aims to include telemetry (although in a reasonable way) by version 40, I’ll switch soon to something else. I feel it might be time to give BSD an honest attempt.
I’m not weird, I’m limited edition!
Fedora Silverblue. But since Fedora aims to include telemetry (although in a reasonable way) by version 40, I’ll switch soon to something else. I feel it might be time to give BSD an honest attempt.
If you want a boring, pretty much dead monoculture of a patch of grass, you gotta work for it. ;) I think that real nature, including useful plants for bees and other critters have much more value. Children should play on lush meadows with flowers and interesting insects to discover, instead of a mentally and visually dull organic carpet, that is merely a facade for wannabe-perfection.
Blowing the seeds off of dandelion flowers into the wind :)
GLaDOS demands to be on the list, or you won’t receive cake.
I’m super torn on desktop environments. There simply are too many great choices! I like XFCE, KDE Plasma and the most recent Gnome versions - for different reasons. KDE is the perfect choice when you want the full shiny, modern, bling desktop and if you love to customize it in all kinds of ways that are possible out of the box. When I spend time with KDE, over the course of weeks, I keep constantly changing my wallpapers, themes, cursors, icons, colors, etc. - just for the sake of variety. With KDE, the desktop never gets boring.
BUT… I also love minimalism (to a tasteful, practical extent) and classic retro computing, as well as efficiency. That’s why XFCE is very comfy to me. It only has the features you need, but still to the extent of a nice and fully featured desktop environment. Doesn’t eat too many system resources, still can look very pretty with themes, does what it’s supposed to. Very stable, too. There are times when KDE just feels cluttered and … too much for me, then I retreat to XFCE.
I’m running Fedora Silverblue for quite a while now and although I always had my gripes about modern Gnome… after using it for a while, it really grew on me. Since version 42, modern Gnome really is going the right direction. It’s nicely clean and readable, modern, performant, and once you get used to it, its different approach to the workflow really makes sense. The apps are lovely, they do one thing and do it well, and they’re beautifully integrated in the same design language. There’s a wonderful collection of apps called Gnome Circle, these are not developed directly by the Gnome team, but endorsed by them, as they’re useful and integrate perfectly into the UI design language. There’s some amazing tools in there! It all feels very unified, and with the Blur-my-shell extension, you don’t need much else for a pretty look. The only downside is that this clean look sometimes is achieved by cutting poweruser features, which can be frustrating when you bump into something you need to do, but the UI doesn’t account for. For example, I have multiple bluetooth adapters in this PC and can’t select which one to use. Still, great desktop.
There already are a few: https://itsfoss.com/immutable-linux-distros/ and Ubuntu seems to work towards an immutable future as well, I think it’s where most distros well be in a few years. The transition needs time though.