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Agreed, although I've already upgraded to trixie (testing). Maybe too early, should have waited 3 months or so for things to stabilize.
Pipeware instead of pulse works like a charm. Still on Xorg, because Wayland is still early beta.
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Of course, "startx" run as user. Not a fan of display managers at all.
18 years of Linux experience. Both Debian/RHEL. The [customized] system is so predictable that it has become boring and calm long ago, but that's what we're trying to achieve, isn't it?
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I see that is all very well indeed
Basically since OpenBSD is not as good on the 'desktop' and battery life is worse with OpenBSD, as well. I started with Redhat Manhattan about 1997 or whatnot and first installed Debian with the Slink release and back then I had to compile a kernel just to get my sound card working so now I find all Linux distros to be extremely easy to use 'Bookworm' is the excitement-free Linux I have been waiting for it is like a rock in a gyre of linux distros that move fast and break things.18 years of Linux experience. Both Debian/RHEL. The [customized] system is so predictable that it has become boring and calm long ago, but that's what we're trying to achieve, isn't it?
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OpenBSD is good on a virtual machine, as there are no problems with Wi-Fi and other peripherals, unlike the bare-metal.
I also came to Debian after many years of using Fedora, I got tired of the endless innovations and upgrades to a new release twice a year. In addition, Debian is a conditionally non-corporate distribution, and depends on politics to a much lesser extent.
I used Gentoo 15 years ago for 3 months. On a kernel built with default settings, nothing worked. You had to figure out with the kernel config and rebuild it 10 times to get a working system.
It's too complicated and long. Now Gentoo is a downed pilot, with a lack of userbase and maintainers.
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Actually, I think the opposite is the case since some security features are only applied on bare-metal perhaps
Fedora sucks it might as well be owned by the NSA. Gentoo is pointless wankery and arch is for people who think they are elite but aren't.I also came to Debian after many years of using Fedora, I got tired of the endless innovations and upgrades to a new release twice a year. In addition, Debian is a conditionally non-corporate distribution, and depends on politics to a much lesser extent.
I used Gentoo 15 years ago for 3 months. On a kernel built with default settings, nothing worked. You had to figure out with the kernel config and rebuild it 10 times to get a working system.
It's too complicated and long. Now Gentoo is a downed pilot, with a lack of userbase and maintainers.
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