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brendaningram | 8 years ago

I've been using Debian Stretch (which was previously Debian Testing) for the last 2 years. I didn't ever have a single problem. But as the months passed I kept getting miffed about old packages. Yes, there are backports etc, but it just didn't feel current enough. I loved the stability though.

When the difference in Firefox versions got to 50 vs 54, and I had written myself a custom bash script to keep Firefox updated, I went looking...

I've been running F26 since the early alpha days, and I have to say that I haven't had a single problem in that whole time. I've been running it on my brand new i7 desktop machine as well as a 7 year old HP laptop. Both have been superb. Performance of Gnome 3.24 is great. Stability of the platform as a whole is rock solid.

In fact, the only issue I have come across is with MakeMKV (which I have written about elsewhere). Other than that, all of my use cases have been rock solid. For reference, they include:

* Firefox (with Lastpass, uBlock origin, HTTPS everywhere, privacy badger add-ons)

* Evolution (for email, contacts, and calendar)

* taskwarrior

* ledger (with some hledger experimentation)

* Gnucash

* MakeMKV (for creating MKV files for my LibreElec HTPC)

* Shotwell (for my 15,000 file photo library)

* Quodlibet (for my 140GB music library - including a growing FLAC library)

* vim (for all my writing)

* git (for my writing and my code)

* Krita (with a Wacom tablet for illustrations for some book ideas I have)

* gimp (for image editing. e.g. I mocked up a photo of my house with how it might look with a grape vine covered pergola)

* Libreoffice (including my wife using it for her study, opening and editing MS Word, Excel, and Powerpoint files from the Uni)

* Ardour & Calf Plugins for music recording. I also experimented with BitWig, which was fantastic, but I prefer to support OSS.

* Golang (1.8, for my own personal development projects)

* Postgres (for same)

* qemu and virt-manager (for virtual machines)

I was a Microsoft .NET developer for almost 20 years. I've been a Linux user in my own time for a bit over 5 years. I'm now happy to say that I use Linux 100% for every single computer related task I have, and I couldn't be happier.

So far, the move to F26 has been fantastic, and it gets my highest recommendation to anyone else that might be considering it.

P.S. I also happily use F26 for the occasional 0AD game :)

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