Until now I have used Ubuntu, Mint, both Opensuses, Arch, Endeavour, Fedora, Manjaro, and Gentoo
And not a single time did I have any problem installing any of these
it’s 2025, what popular distro makes it not easy?
For nvidia? Alpine Linux. It’s so hard there is 0 support outside of nouveau
(I mean, Alpine uses MUSL instead of GLIBC, so expected)
For AMD? doas apk add linux-firmware-amdgpu mesa mesa-tools vulkan-loaders xf86-video-amdgpu There, you’re good to go(wiki also tells you that)
- Use a DIY distro made for containers
- Cry about having do DIY
Merkste selber
idk about 2025 but as of a few years ago, Slackware used to not have a dependency resolver in whatever it uses to download packages. You had to resolve dependencies manually.
Luckily I switched to Gentoo and 3 years later after my system was done compiling, it was already out of date so when I used emerge to update my system, it borked itself because it was so out of date.
Yes, but Slackware. That’s obviously intentional
And OP did specify “popular”, which Slackware hasn’t been since the late 90s
Gentoo, LFS, Slackware.
LFS is not a distro and I highly doubt it’s popular as well.
popular
if you’re using any of those you can’t complain about having to run a few command lines
Slackware’s package manager is extremely easy to use:
slackpkg upgrade-all
upgrades all installed packages
slackpkg install-new
installs all packages that were added to the repo
slackpkg clean-system
uninstalls all packages that were removed from the repoAnd that’s all.
That reads easy but what’s with installing all packages that were added to a repo? How does that help anything?
It’s Slackware’s approach to dependency resolution. You don’t need to resolve dependencies on your system if you just install every package in the repo.
The installed size is under 15 GB, and you get a system that works equally well for a desktop as for a server with lots of app choices out of the box.
(Throwing the kitchen sink at you was the common way to install Linux in the old days, before quick Internet)
That’s a horrendous approach since probably two decades. They shouldn’t slack so hard.
Yeah for NVDIA you either wanna use a distro that bakes it in (Bazzite, PopOS) or hop over to tge command line and install the drivers there, e. g. Fedora:
https://rpmfusion.org/Howto/NVIDIA
No idea how GUIs are for this nowadays (Manjaro, Linix Mint, Ubuntu, back when I used those distros it wasn’t working too well most of the time).
Arch-based distros do have the nvidia-dkms package available, works great in my experience. Linux Mint and Ubuntu got a dedicated driver utility for this. Debian provides a “nvidia-driver” package. OpenSuse provides it via YaST, or manually in a dedicated repo.
Does it work as good as having the driver pre-installed? Hell no, those nvidia drivers are gosh darn awful in nature. We can just hope NVK can completely replace them asap.
Fesora shows a popup on first boot along the lines if “click here if you need NViDIA drivers.” If you install an Nvidia GPU aft the fact you have to search for it, but there is a GUI.
I honestly really like pop os. I use it as a daily driver and it’s been great. The only thing I hate is that I can’t change the system color but I know there’s an infinite amount of ways around that.