Hey! I’m currently on Fedora Workstation and I’m getting bored. Nothing in particular. I’ve heard about immutable distros and I’m thinking about Fedora Kinoite. The idea is interesting but idk if it’s worth it. CPU and GPU are AMD. Mostly used for gaming.

  • mintycactus@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    There is no much difference, you just install less shit into the system and basically go 100% flatbox.

    • Guenther_Amanita@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      That’s absolutely not true.
      Immutable systems aren’t just “normal systems you can’t change”, no, they’re more.

      They’re image based. So, every OS is the same, giving you better reproducibility, resulting in less bugs, better security and a “fresh” OS after every update.
      Your OS accumulates stuff over every update and by just using it over time, and having an image based OS is just better.

      Immutability has so much more advantages than just keeping the host clean. It has some disadvantages, yes, but for most people out there, way more advantages!

      • mintycactus@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Yeah, I run Silverblue and I never watch back to common distro any more. They say there is a learning curve and they are not for novices… That is absolutely not true, they are easier and the only thing you learn is layering packages, which is same as installing packages in every distro with CLI in terminal lol, what learning curve?

        • Guenther_Amanita@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          Yep, same. While I’m not a total noob, I also don’t have that much experience. Just that much to confidentially break my system every time and not knowing why or how to fix it.

          SB just makes rolling back way easier, or even prevents breaking my system at all.

          And as a notorious DE-hopper, it is also very convenient.

          I barely notice any drawbacks for me tbh

    • zingo@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      This is what I have been doing for years on my Synology box.

      Just a handful of Synology apps (mostly backup and snapshot apps) and all the rest of the ecosystem running in Docker. So the main system is bloatfree.

      On Linux desktop, mostly flatpaks installations.