Edit: And in the end, it’s back to good old Fedora with Xfce. I guess I’m an old man, fixed in my ways. Haiku was interesting, but not nearly as stable as needed. OpenSuSE with Xfce was rough, it requires more polish.

I’ve been a Fedora Linux user for a million years by now, and I haven’t touched any other OS (outside of Windows 10 and 11 at work).

Lately I got a refurbished ThinkCentre from ca 2018 (7th generation Intel i5, 16GB RAM, Intel HD 630). The initial idea was to use it as a media PC but the small form factor ended up not being small enough for my living room.

Now I’m thinking of using it as a desktop PC for a while, to see if it can make my laptop be a portable machine again instead of always plugged, always on. If it doesn’t work out, I’ll use it as a home server.

Since this is all an experiment, I want to give a new OS a shot before I settle for the familiar Fedora.

OpenSuSE is the first on my list, but even from the LiveUSB I noticed that the software selection is more limited than I’m used to.

I’m thinking of giving HaikuOS a shot as well.

What else has been going on in the world of free OSes since 2007? What’s one that you are excited about?

  • beefcat@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Linux is UNIX made by people who hate Windows.

    FreeBSD is UNIX made by people who love UNIX.

    Give FreeBSD a shot.

    • Aatube@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’m sorry what
      I’m not opposed to trying out FreeBSD but 1. Both aren’t Unix 2. Linux’s development has no more relation to Windows than BSD, I don’t see why you think FreeBSD loves Unix more. In fact you could fully say that macOS loves Unix more.

      • beefcat@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Relax buddy, it’s just a very old joke.

        FreeBSD absolutely is UNIX, it is descended from Berkeley Software Distribution, itself a descendant of UNIX 5.

        But the joke isn’t so much about the lineage of these operating systems, rather their design philosophy.