• @[email protected]
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    111 year ago

    You know what? Ubuntu. There I said it.

    I’ve been using it since 2007 - 7.04 was my first foray into Linux ever. At present day it’s been the most “it just works” distro for me. I installed it and… that’s it. Everything just worked.

    I don’t care about the “ads” in the terminal. I don’t care that it’s “bloated” (even the most bloated distro is less bloated than Windows).

    If a company is porting their software to Linux, chances are they’re focusing on Ubuntu. Not Debian. Not Mint. Ubuntu.

    If something isn’t working, chances are there’s a community post about it with a working solution.

    It’s cool that distro hopping is a hobby for a lot of people. It isn’t for me. I want no bullshit, just set it up and let it work so I can focus on doing stuff within the OS, not setting up and fine tuning the OS itself day in and day out. And for me that’s Ubuntu.

    • ProtonBadger
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      51 year ago

      I don’t use Ubuntu on my desktop but in my experience it performs on par with other distributions and it is not a RAM hog either.

      I thing “bloat” is a big mythical monster people like to throw around because it’s difficult to argue against and scares everybody.

      I think snaps were slow to load to begin with but I also read that it was much improved recently, one can also install Flatpak.

      So I think Ubuntu is a great distro, performant and stable.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I like to think of Ubuntu as the distro that just works. Easy install, tons of guides, tons of apps in deb form, minimal use of console.

    • @aordogvan
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      11 year ago

      Started with Mandrake a long time ago and when it went away turned to Ubuntu and have stuck with it ever since. Surprised no one mentioned LTS (long time support) which I think is 5 years. This means for servers you don’t have to worry about frequent upgrades (think fedora) and for desktops my setup stays stable for a good while.

      I try other disros in VMs just to try sexier stuff but for production stick to Ubuntu.