Watched DT’s video on Debian Bookworm, immediately thought of this.

  • Felix@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I know I’m gonna make myself unpopular. But Arch Linux never broke on me once. I even survived the grub incident, as I use a different bootloader. You just have to be ok with constant changes, as the software you run won’t stay the same for 2 years straight, like it is the case on Debian.

  • Titou@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Used it in the past, great for the folks looking for a just work, secure and stable distro

    • theshatterstone54@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      Still accurate. Although something Techlore said in a recent video really stuck with me: everyone is praising Debian right now, because it’s new. But in a year or so, maybe 2, Debian will still be where it is now, with the only exception being security updates. It isn’t a viable desktop for your regular user that wants to play games or use the latest technology, for example.

      • mbw@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Then again, I’m not sure if for servers, Debian is still as important as it used to be. I’m probably overly generalizing, but often all you need is a few daemons installed natively (SSH, Docker, firewall), and your reverse proxy and any services are then managed e.g. via docker compose.

        There are variations on this, but with the fraction of packages installed via the distro’s package manager having become smaller like that, what distro you use for a server should not impact your QoL as severely as it used to I think.

        Your point about desktop usage still holds of course.

      • twosixonetwo@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Debian testing can be a viable desktop though. Obviously it won’t be as stable, but you can’t have bleeding edge and always stable

  • fox@lemmy.fakecake.org
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    1 year ago

    most important thing about debian is that it’s the only production-grade distro which some corporation can’t take away from you unilaterally.