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Other BSD and UNIX/UNIX-like Any other flavour of BSD or UNIX that does not have a section of its own. |
View Poll Results: what linux distro do you use and/or like? | |||
Redhat / Centos | 24 | 15.09% | |
Suse | 4 | 2.52% | |
Debian | 36 | 22.64% | |
Slackware | 30 | 18.87% | |
Gentoo | 13 | 8.18% | |
Ubuntu | 23 | 14.47% | |
Others | 29 | 18.24% | |
Voters: 159. You may not vote on this poll |
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My only Linux distro I use at home is Manjaro/Arch. Main usage: running my outliners and closed source textmaker office program. All the other things are done with my OpenBSD workstation/laptops.
At work our main servers (pysical and virtual) are running Debian / FreeBSD / OpenBSD. Debian --> systemd --> pain in the ass. Aside this, I'm a lucky guy... Regards Andre |
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I still use Debian 7, but not much, and when support for that runs out, maybe even sooner,
Linux will no longer be a part of my system. I am happy with OpenBsd, have not tried any of the other BSD's since Open Bsd works fine for me. Nothing against Linux, but I am much more comfortable with OpenBsd. I probably will still have the current Debian stable on a VM, and the testing version on another. My wife, and my kids computers have the MX -16 on them. ----edited---- I didn't see the poll at first, but still am not voting for any, in the not to distant future , all the computers in our family will be OpenBsd, or another BSD
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My best friends are parrots Last edited by PapaParrot; 5th May 2017 at 02:53 AM. Reason: comment |
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All GNU-*Linux are stable in the same sense more-or-less. I can never fathom the term people throw around calling their distro stable. They are are all stable. In fact the most unstable aspect of a GNU/Linux distro is the kernel itself. Linux kernel is one huge pile of bugs. Over the years they've packed in so much (useless) stuff in it that so many things can and do go wrong. The LT release receives 100+ major revisions and the timetable isn't even halfway through. I personally no longer trust the Linux kernel for its stability. Just like it was the case with Windows all those years ago there's always an aura of fear hanging around the system that it may topple over any time. At this time they have three top release revisions and they are all fairly useless. To get anything remotely stable you have to go back to release 4.9 at the most.
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2018: After several attempts to be happy with Slackware, I am surprisingly happy with Gentoo (non-GNU Linux, by the way) now.
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There is a copious amount of noise on Linux fora. |
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I've been using AntiX (Debian based/no systemd) for years now, (before that, I was a Debian user), the kernel has got quite big in that time, but I see they are going to be stripping out unused bits of it soon, if not already done.
I've not had any trouble with it that wasn't of my own making, it gets as fully tested as it can be before release, which is more than can be said for some of the major distros. As an aside, I had my first bit of trouble with OBSD the other day, my laptop kept going around in circles trying to boot(!?). But it's quite an old one, so I put it down to the laptop, as I've never had any problems with OBSD that weren't of my own making either.
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Linux since 1999, & also a BSD user. |
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What is definition of stable? Does robust update and upgrade procedure count? In that case IMHO some distributions are clearly more stable than another.
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Signature: Furthermore, I consider that systemd must be destroyed. Based on Latin oratorical phrase |
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Good point. No wonder we keep seeing new functionality and new bugs being added to the Linux kernel well after a release is supposed to have matured.
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I started using Devuan on an old Intel laptop from 2004 or 2005, but don't feel in full control or safe using it. So today is the day I will finally move this laptop over to OpenBSD. I have a modern powerful machine with Intel, OpenBSD and Windows 7 on it, but I don't trust Intel any more so it sits off line.
Last edited by Prevet; 27th May 2018 at 01:05 AM. |
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I use Linux on my Raspberry Pi cause I cannot install OpenBSD...
Triple boot :
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ThinkPad W500 P8700 6GB HD3650 - faultry ThinkStation P700 2x2620v3 32GB 1050ti 3xSSD 1xHDD |
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Debian.
From Etch (~2007) to Wheezy (~2017) it has been my trustworthy OS after years of Windows debacle. With Wheezy end-of-life looming, I have "OS-hoped" between Debian and FreeBSD/OpenBSD and settled on the later 1 year ago. Nowadays, I keep Debian stretch/stable on a spare laptop for android development. I seldom use it though. For everything else, OpenBSD is my main OS. |
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I've used Linux for 2-3 years between late 2015- early 2018, costantly changing distro while seeking out for one capable of suiting my needs and taste. I've found few (namely Slackware, CRUX, Void Linux and Alpine) which I like a lot, especially Slackware. However, I've come to the conclusion that unless I were coping with ultramodern hardware (which I don't own), I just don't need Linux.
BSDs and Illumos look to more solid, professional, polished, stable, lightweight, simple, well designed and egineered systems than Linux, while their documentation is better organized and accessible and the community more mature, competent, friendly and fun. BSDs and Illumos make me want to contribute, study how thevsystem works in-depth, while Linux does not I mean, to each one his own, Linux is just not the best for me, at least for the moment. If I really had to choose an alternstive OS, I'd go with macOS
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“Mi casa tendrá dos piernas y mis sueños no tendrán fronteras„ |
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Linux has become a mess, strewn with complicated "black box" solutions such as systemd and lots of needless wheel reinvention. There are simply too many corporate fingers in the Linux pie these days and no clear direction or leadership. |
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I've never bought Thinkpads, Dell laptops or other typical hardware to run BSDs and Solaris, most stuff I own is old and second-handed,but's always happened to be supoorted and work flawlessly so far. I started by moving my old 2000 desktop PC from WindowsMe to OpenSolaris in 2008, and it was fully supported. Now it runs Tribblix OS My first laptop is a cheap Acer TravelMate gifted by the trade union to my father in 2008; it runs NetBSD flawlessly, but has also run FreeBSD and DragonflyBSD for a while My second laptop is an intermediate-quality Samsung from 2010. I started using it only on 2015 though and it runs OpenIndiana. My current desktop is a relatively powerful and modern machine I built in early 2017, and it was first though as a Slackware/Steam gaming platform and a multimedia workstation. Later on,dince I was not playing games much, I decided to put FreeBSD in it, and it turned out being perfectly supported (including dedicated soubd card, nvidia graphics, internal wireless, bluetooth). My Rpi3 runs NetBSD without problem This is not meant to assess you're lying,but that your experience with very old hardware being unsupported should rather be regarded as an exception
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“Mi casa tendrá dos piernas y mis sueños no tendrán fronteras„ Last edited by Sehnsucht94; 20th June 2018 at 11:12 PM. |
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Much of my hardware is discarded by other people. Usually Linux will work on it. I don't mean to say Linux is better in ways that it's not. Here are a few of my examples: * Intel i915 broken on NetBSD, GPU crashes and slows down. * radeondrm for ATI Radeon RV280 9200 broken on NetBSD. X comes up black. * a couple of old ATAPI DVD's spew errors under NetBSD and OpenBSD. * HP g60 laptop won't boot install kernel under NetBSD and OpenBSD. Both of us are of course offering anecdotes of our own random experiences, it's hard to draw general conclusions from such a limited sample. |
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Maybe you could have tried FreeBSD and Illumos too,but clearly, if you don't use/like them they make no sense or advantage against Linux
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“Mi casa tendrá dos piernas y mis sueños no tendrán fronteras„ |
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Last edited by IdOp; 21st June 2018 at 01:03 PM. Reason: minor stuff |
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