this post was submitted on 02 Jun 2025
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Just curious to know if anyone has been using the same distro for multiple years/decades and what or if you have it takes for you to want to switch to a different distro?

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[–] pineapple@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago

Probably nothing. I'm currently in the process of starting to distrohop a lot. I want to try out lots of distros, for fun and in order to recommend distros to other people. I will probably eventually settle on arch or nixos though, the customization seams really awesome.

[–] despaircode@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago

I've been running Slackware for a long time and have no intention of switching unless Pat steps down and Slackware goes down with him. As long as my base install receives updates, I'm good. I take care of the rest.

[–] gi1242@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

I went Gentoo to Debian to Arch.

Gentoo took too much time to maintain. (Not just compile time. But also human time editing config files).

Debian was great, until I had new hardware that needed a recent kernel and Wayland. i tried testing but that wasn't stable enough and took too much of my time maintaining.

I'm using arch now. i would only switch if they do something egregious (push ads, malware or snap)

[–] Adderbox76@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 month ago

Been running Manjaro for years. Don't really know what would make me change.

I guess maybe if I suddenly started getting more and more dependency errors when upgrading packages from the AUR it would make me consider jumping to put Arch.

But right not that's not the case. So the benefit of switching is out weighed by the pain in the ass of having to say Everything up again.

[–] Tattorack@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (6 children)

Better compatibility with Intel Arc cards, for one. Actually that would be a really big one.

I'm on Ubuntu. I had my Intel card work pretty well in Blender 3D,except it couldn't do BVH calculations in cycles, and I couldn't for the life of me figure out how to make it work, because the thing that is supposed to make it work breaks the render kernels for Blender.

Alright... But it still rendered faster than my GTX 1060.

But then I also realised I couldn't boot up any UE5 game because somehow it was convinced my card isn't DX12 compatible. Also major artefacting issues in Oblivion Remastered.

Right... So I decided to go from Ubuntu LTS to Ubuntu 25.04, because the cutting edge MESA drivers needs a newer kernel, and the newer kernel is supposedly more Intel card friendly, which might fix my BVH calculation issues with Blender as well.

UE5 games run now, except for Oblivion Remastered, which still has graphical artefacting. But Intel didn't have render kernels for Ubuntu 25.04 yet, so I couldn't render with cycles at all until they updated their repo.

They eventually updated their repo a week or two ago. But the render kernels don't load at all in Blender 3D, telling me "Oh this is meant for OneAPI compatible cards", yes, what the fuck do you think an Intel Arc A770 is!?!

So... Uh... Yeah, if there is a distro put there without all of this, that would be very great.

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[–] wwb4itcgas@lemm.ee 3 points 1 month ago

The repo servers going down or some unacceptable change to the system defaults. Starting to distribute my browser (or anything else) as only snaps / flatpaks would absolutely do it. Yeah, I'm looking squarely at you, Ubuntu.

[–] LiamTheBox@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago

Modern desktop enviroment design, and seamless updates like in macOS

[–] gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com 3 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I used Fedora KDE from 2012 to 2023, then I moved to Fedora Kinoite because I like the idea of atomic distros. Don't know if that counts though since its mostly the same software, just delivered slightly differently (however you could argue that is the case for all distros)

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[–] JTskulk@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Snap getting installed, ads when starting a shell. Basically the reasons I ditched Kubuntu.

[–] crumbguzzler5000@feddit.org 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I feel this so much, if you want that experience you may as well be using Windows! What did you switch to?

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[–] thepiguy@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 month ago

If all the mirrors for pacman somehow got taken down, probably would switch to something corporate like Ubuntu.

[–] ianhclark510@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 1 month ago

I made the jump from Manjaro when a bunch of their maintained repos started to ... corrode? for lack of a better term, other than that I tend to adapt to whatever my workplace chooses, last place loved Ubuntu, current workplace is all about RHEL, so i'm not going to argue

[–] Phen@lemmy.eco.br 3 points 1 month ago

Dropped Ubuntu because of snaps.

Dropped Manjaro because updating anything on it was too annoying and potentially destructive if you didn't read through every changelog.

Currently on bluefin because everything is working smoothly on it. Also have a Bazzite setup which I'm not as happy with as I am with bluefin but not to the point of thinking of dropping it.

[–] Heavybell@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

If gentoo stopped being maintained, I guess I'd find something else.

[–] DrunkAnRoot@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 month ago

if gentoo decided ti bake spyware into every package that i cant removr thatd be a deal breaker

[–] jjlinux@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

All I need is a sudden jolt of "I need to test other distros", distro hop for a day or 2,and then end up back in my distro of choice. This happens every couple of months give or take.

[–] vegetvs@kbin.earth 2 points 1 month ago

I ditched FreeBSD and Slackware when I got tired of installing everything from scratch on every major release. Compiling stuff from source was interesting for learning and seeing how amazing open source can be, but it wasn't fun long term.

Then I ditched Ubuntu because there was always something not working on laptops, usually related to hibernation/sleep and/or webcam/wireless. I was frustrated with how little care was put into making sure such basic things would simply work.

I'm currently very satisfied with Mint. Everything just works out of the box and Mint X is a lovely theme for old folks like me, who appreciate a proper good looking desktop and can't understand what all the hype is with dark/flat themed UIs these days.

[–] JGrffn@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

I'm on Bazzite, so I may be tempted to switch to SteamOS on at least one of my devices, but Bazzite covers pretty much all my bases currently, both for gaming and work. I have a laptop with EndeavourOS and I love it, been using it for about 2-3 years there, but I'm switching laptops soon to a framework so I'll also go with Bazzite there for consistency and due to the official support it has with framework laptops.

Honestly the experience I've had with these distros so far leaves me wishing for nothing more, and now with immutability and distro box I kinda don't see the point in changing to anything else unless Bazzite development dies out or they make a painfully stupid decision, which doesn't seem to be the case so far!

[–] timmytbt@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 month ago

Having more time to spend learning a new distro

[–] sunshine@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

I usually try out a couple of new distros whenever I am either setting up a new computer, or something happens with my current machine that requires a fresh OS anyway.

I've been married to Pop!_OS for a couple of years now. however, for the past couple of months I've been booting exclusively into KDE Plasma on my desktop computer; almost everything works really well for me in that environment, except the built-in Pop!_OS stuff itself, such as the pop shop, does not work very well. so I might end up switching to a distribution that's built around KDE, such as KDE Neon.

I'm also pretty curious about the Nix package manager and the concept of immutable desktop systems, so I guess I might try NixOS at some point? I don't know much about it yet.

[–] mindbleach@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 month ago

Previously? Some schmuck changing all the windows to be left-handed, immediately before a long-term-support feature freeze.

Zero percent surprised by many other comments throwing shade at Ubuntu.

[–] AmazingAwesomator@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

the creation of a non-kodi htpc/media center alternative that works like a smart TV OS and works on a raspberry pi would get me to change my streaming device.

i stream jellyfin from a home server, and jellyfin on kodi is painful to use :(

an OS that can be controlled with tv-controller buttons and has an interface similar to any of the other players in this space would make me throw away my nvidia shield tv in a heartbeat

[–] LiveLM@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

It is? What issues are you having?
I've used the Jellycon plugin for a while and it worked amazing.

[–] AmazingAwesomator@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (4 children)

kodi is really good for local media, but none of my media is local. instead of using the smartTV-style jellyfin UI, jellyfin indexes the media from the server and throws up a text-only list of media in a folder structure. if i rip another movie, it needs to be indexed.

though it is pulling the index and functioning as expected, it makes the experience feel like browsing in dolphin for spreadsheets instead of getting ready for movie night.

the experience was bad enough where i just plugged the old streaming stick back in and hid my failur. i didnt tell the wife about my experience (she hates the streaming stick and wanted an OSS option). i said i would deliver one, so she thinks i just haven't done it yet. :(

[–] LiveLM@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Ah wait, maybe I can help!
When you tried it, were you using the Default Kodi skin? Because if so, the list view it uses by default does indeed look crappy, but it's customizable!

When you open the Movies or TV list, look at the bottom left, you should see a icon that looks like this:

What this means is, you can press the direction listed to open a options menu. So for example pressing Left when this is shown opens this sidebar:

Try changing the display mode from "List" to something like "Poster" and you get this:

The movies you see on this screenshot are all coming from my Jellyfin server, not too bad eh?

And this is just the beginning, if you look into the built-in Add-ons store in Kodi, there's tons of third-party skins you can install, and thanks to the "Playlists" and "Widgets" system in Kodi, you can really fine tune your setup!

This is what my Kodi homescreen looks like with the Arctic: Zephyr Reloaded skin and a bunch of tweaking. It's setup to show the next episodes of what I'm watching right away:

It's all still coming down from my Jellyfin server. The icons on the left are shortcuts to open the full library view of the server instead of the local media, allowing me easy access to my library instead of having to navigate a bunch to reach the Jellycon Lists. You can customize these views too:

Now, setting this up can get pretty annoying, specially as all these settings seem to be 15 menus deep into Kodi and the skin settings and you might find yourself going back and forth quite a bit, but I think the end result is well worth it.

If you ever fancy giving it a try again, I'd recommend installing Kodi on your computer and playing with it there. When you got something you're happy with, transferring the settings over Raspberry shouldn't be too hard. Hope this helps!

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[–] utopiah@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

I relatively recently (a year or so?) switched from Ubuntu to Debian.

I felt like Ubuntu was bloating up and that sadly those decisions were done through the enshitification process. I went then "back to basics" and I don't regret it at all.

I had the (wrong) preconception that Debian was "behind" or "slow" for "new" stuff but truth is, despite being "stable" most of what I care about is already in, even for things like gaming in VR. For the rest if I need something "edgy" then I can get the software via another mean than the package manager.

So... what made me change is a desire for more minimalism and the ability to test safely (files saved).

[–] wfh@lemm.ee 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

On my laptops: Debian -> Fedora. Mostly because I couldn't reliably use my external display on Debian, and because I ~~needed~~ wanted shiny new things. Also new hardware.

On my gaming rig: Manjaro -> Nobara -> Bazzite. I left Manjaro because the system was slowly getting worse with each update, and I wanted to game, not maintain my system. I ditched Nobara after a botched version upgrade. Bazzite is fine for now.

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