I have been some bad times this year on my dev machines. First was ubuntu 21.04 which was out of date that I have no idea. I tried to update it later manually and it went bad. And another was my centos which use py3.6 as system python and I can not update it because I need new version for some work. These are bad feelings that I got this year. I just want a long live dev OS.what is your opotion?
slater|3 years ago
Yesyes, it'll cost more upfront, yesyes it has its own quirks, yesyes Apple bad boo hiss etc. etc., but still - to your last point: a long-lived dev OS, combined with nigh-untouchably-good hardware integration (note: integration, not 'the fastest thing nvidia/amd pushed out of the factory last week')?
Get a Mac. M2 Macbook Air is amazing:
https://www.apple.com/macbook-air-m2/
GartzenDeHaes|3 years ago
scrapheap|3 years ago
If you want the system packages on your OS to jump up to new versions as time goes by then you want to look at a Rolling Release distributions (e.g. Arch).
Alternatively you can use Debian with either Stable, Testing or Unstable as the source rather than a traditional named version (Note: research this before trying it so you understand the risks that you are taking).
GianFabien|3 years ago
I would love to use a Mac, but I'm wary of Apple's consumer oriented locking down of features. When I worked for some large corps, was issued with Windows laptops - compared to Debian it was a nightmare.
mellowagain|3 years ago
It comes with amethyst (`ame`) as AUR helper pre-installed, which is also in my opinion the best AUR helper out right now (and it's written in Rust!).
Automatic BTRFS snapshots before package upgrades have saved my butt once already and I couldn't live without them.
100% recommended
in9|3 years ago
Crystal Linux did catch my attention :D
n8henrie|3 years ago
klardotsh|3 years ago
abdrehman|3 years ago
Also I love Debian 11. Thinking to install KDE with it but I dont have time...
sergiotapia|3 years ago
I don't miss Mac at all.
ksaj|3 years ago
fulafel|3 years ago
vasirian|3 years ago
My i3wm config has survived over a decade and has provided a consistent UI/UX across various distros. Fedora is stable across version upgrades and stays out of the way, just like i3 does.
akulbe|3 years ago
ksaj|3 years ago
Although I do use it on my laptop, I wouldn't consider WSL stable. If the boot loader or anything involved with the boot process goes kaput, there is nothing you can do but delete it and reinstall. There isn't even a rescue mode, and you can't just fiddle with the partition tables. At least on a physical Linux partition, you should still be able to mount the drive and get to your data, and you have a gazillion rescue options.
unintendedcons|3 years ago
Feels good, feels right.
AOsborn|3 years ago
smackeyacky|3 years ago
For my paid job doing node and python, windows 10. But I wish it was debian.
rubyist5eva|3 years ago
kasperlitheater|3 years ago
tsingy|3 years ago
4t8dds|3 years ago
tsingy|3 years ago
jareds|3 years ago
wara23arish|3 years ago
ParetoOptimal|3 years ago
josephcsible|3 years ago
yonisto|3 years ago
aprdm|3 years ago
xavier_|3 years ago
PaulHoule|3 years ago
fbrncci|3 years ago