This is kind of the anti-distro hopping thread. How long have you stayed on a single Linux distribution for your main PC? What about servers?

I’ve been on Debian on and off since 2021, but finally committed to the platform since April of this year.

Before that I was on OpenBSD from 2011 - 2021 for my desktop.

Prior to that, FreeBSD for many years, followed by a few years of distro-hopping various Linux distros (Slackware, Arch, Fedora, simplyMEPIS, and ZenWalk from memory).

How long have you been on your distribution? Do we have anybody here who has been on their current distro for more than a decade?

6 points

I stopped having time (or inclination) to mess around with multiple distributions after getting out of college and into real life. So… Since at least about 2002, with Debian.

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3 points

Wow, more than 20 years on the same OS.

I would have stayed with FreeBSD or OpenBSD but eventually my requirements outgrew what they could provide.

Now I’m on Debian. You chose … wisely.

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6 points

I’ve been on Yggdrasil Linux since 1993. Now, get off my lawn, you punks!

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1 point
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6 points

Workstation: Ubuntu approximately 18 years. (2004)

Servers: Debian approximately 25 years. (1998)

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1 point

Wow, probably the winner. 25 years is really cool, such a long time for one distro.

In 1998 I tried Red Hat 5.2, but then switched to Slackware, and ended up on FreeBSD since it was like a better Slackware. I must have been all of 12-13 years old.

I admit I never even tried Debian until Lenny, and then went back to OpenBSD.

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5 points

I distro hopped a lot since installing a retail red hat box bought at the store in 199something.

It’s now more than 10 years that I basically only run Debian (on all my servers) and Gentoo/funtoo (on my workstations). For my partner and relatives, I install only Mint because it lacks all the cool gadgets, but it’s stable as a rock, especially on notebooks, and still reminds them of Windows.

I tried Arch, btw. Nice wiki, horrible package management.

I tried Pop_OS, it’s fun, it’s fine, it’s fresh, but tends to self-destruct if I push it too much.

I loved Elementary OS, it’s really promising but always gave me the feeling to run a beta OS.

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2 points

Sams Teach Yourself Linux in 24 hours. Christmas 1998. Red Hat Linux 5.2.

I upgraded a struggling 486 from Windows 95 OSR2.1 to Red Hat and Afterstep, and never really looked back.

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2 points

Afterstep

Oh man that was such a cool UI, the best clone of NeXTStep for Linux. But configuring the menus by hand was annoying. :)

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2 points

I agree on pretty much all of this. I love Pop, so psyched for COSMIC DE. I now run it on all my machines (except for Raspberry Pi OS on my RasPis and EndeavourOS on my old PC).

Package Management on Arch is not my cup of tea. But EndeavourOS is great for what I need it to do (make old PC feel like slightly less old PC).

Mint is awesome. If I have to recommend a distro to someone who is not that knowledgeable, I give them Mint and a quick rundown on how it works. Mint is awesome.

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2 points

Can I suggest you DietPi for your Raspberries? It’s basically Debian, but it’s tweaked to not consume your SD card too much.

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5 points

OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. It’s surprisingly stable for a rolling release distro.

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4 points

Yes, I was a distro hopper up until I tried Tumbleweed for the first time. Been using it for two years now, hopped around for a year prior.

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1 point

Couldn’t agree more. Probably because they have some automatic QA going on on their CI and if some package does something wrong that this QA catches the package does not get included into update until it passes. Also if there would be something that would go wrong you still have automatic BTRFS snapshots created before and after and update and a boot entry automatically added to GRUB so you could simply reboot into old working state in such an unfortunate case.

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1 point

How long? I remember seeing some people have used it since the mid-2010’s on the same install.

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