I’m new to #Lemmy and making myself feel at home by posting a bit!

My first Linux distribution was elementary OS in early March 2020. Since then, I’ve tried Manjaro, Arch Linux, Fedora, went back to Manjaro, and since early January 2023, I’ve landed on Debian as my home in the #Linux world.

What was your first Linux distro?

  • DeuxChevaux@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    SUSE Linux, back in the 1990s. Because you could buy it for cheap, and you got not only the huge stack of floppy disks to install it from, but also a set of thick fat detailed handbooks (these things made from paper full of pictures and letters and glued together, like your grandparents may have had). I spent many nights with them books instead of my wife…

    It was a bear to install and terribly complicated to configure back then; at least for me. But in the end, I had a nice server running well for a while.

  • Heavybell@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Red Hat, back when that was a distro. It was a long time ago now and my toying with it didn’t last long; and began an obsession with hardware RAID…

  • cr78bw@anonsys.net
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    3 months ago

    Slackware in 1996(?), then SuSE when they came up.
    I then tried a bit every once in a while, but really never got fully comfortable with it on a desktop.
    A few weeks ago I bought a new Desktop PC, which is now running with the Arch-fork #endeavouros and I really love it.

    @midtsveen

  • Jess@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Oof. I am pretty sure it was Mandrake in 97. I bounced around trying what was around before settling on Gentoo for a decade plus. Then both my laptop and desktop got too long in the tooth to make distcc even worthwhile and migrated to Arch. I figured it was the closest distro to Gentoo that I wouldn’t have too many problems. I don’t know howong it’s been now, but I’m an Arch fangirl. I’ve installed it many times since on work computers as well. For remote systems though, it’s always Debian stable.

  • signofzeta@lemmygrad.ml
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    3 months ago

    My first Linux was Gentoo. It took several tries to get code compiled and working on that Pentium 4, but I will say, the process taught me a lot about Linux in general. It was the ultimate crash course. I’d recommend Gentoo for all beginners who don’t mind digging in to the point of frustration, because it’s a great learning experience.

  • phantomwise@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    I actually wanted Arch but everyone was saying that you HAD to do a manual install first and I had been miserably failing at doing it in a WM for a few weeks. I had finally decided to try it directly on hardware so that I had no choice but to complete it if I wanted to use my laptop, and just as was about to burn the ISO on a USB stick the power went out and my hard drive died 😑 On a saturday evening, obviously…

    All I had was a Haiku USB I had made to check it out, and a Linux Mint USB a friend lent me that I hadn’t tried because I assumed I would hate it. So I used Haiku for about 30 minutes (let’s say it had a few bugs), and Mint for the rest of the weekend and did, in fact, absolutely hate it (Windows PTSD 😭 ).

    So until the computer store opened on Monday, I spend 48 hours browsing the web to find a better distro and when I got my new SSD I installed AntiX, because it was very light and likely to run well on my potato-grade laptop, it came without a DE and 7 different window managers to try (which seemed cool at the time, but I didn’t actually try any of them except the default one IceWM and after a few weeks I installed i3 😅 ) and also because YouTube had convinced me that systemd was the Antechrist (thanks YouTube 😑 ).

    After two months I decided to try Manjaro on my other laptop… it didn’t go well : incompatible dependencies preventing updates, Nvidia + Wayland making games not display correctly, and if I had to fix all that manually what’s the point I just might as well use regular Arch. So I gave up after 48 hours and decided to install Arch, and just as I booted from the Arch ISO the laptop died (fan malfunction) and I had to send it back 😑.

    After three months, the third laptop, bought with the refund from the second one, did actually allow me to install Arch without throwing a fit 🥳 using archinstall to preserve my mental health this time.

    Arch has been really great but I need to switch to a bigger SSD and I am probably going to try Nix because it seems really cool 🤩

    • Eyedust@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      As an Arch user who spun up NixOS for a few months; it’s worth it. It will take weeks to perfectly set up and it could take months to properly learn nixlang, but what you get is a solid, unbreakable, reproducible distro. Move over your dotfiles, home-manager, and nixconfigs and you essentially have the same setup on any other PC (though you may have to alter the video driver config).

      I had my nixfiles all modular. My nouveau video drivers for the ancient laptop I was using? Imported from a separate config. That way I could leave anything hardware related behind and draw up new hardware configs for the system I was moving to when the time came. Don’t like your DE? Comment it out and write in whatever else you want to try.

      Don’t get me wrong, I still love and use Arch on my main machine. Its just that my dive down the NixOS rabbit hole was really fun and I haven’t even tried flakes.

  • piranhaconda@mander.xyz
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    3 months ago

    Whatever Ubuntu was available in 2015. I only dabbled in Linux over the past 10 years. More seriously switching over in the last year or so.

    I have Unraid as a server OS (Debian based, running a lot of docker containers and a couple VMs). Debian on my laptop. And Bazzite (fedora based) on my Lenovo Legion Go.

    Still need to swap my gaming PC from windows. May try Bazzite on that as well. I’ve also tried Mint, Manjaro, and Zorin

      • piranhaconda@mander.xyz
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        3 months ago

        Yea I’m running a much leaner Debian on my laptop now. Base OS was very bare, slowly adding only what I need because it’s a 2016 laptop and noticeably slower on some more bloated OSs

    • dipdowel@feddit.nl
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      3 months ago

      Cool, so I’m not the only one here 😁. Mine was also RHL 5.x, can’t remember the exact minor version, whatever they sold on CDs in 1999. I then switched to FreeBSD for a year or so.

  • zemon@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    Andromeda Linux around 2009. It had cool astronomy based theme and animation.

  • Matriks404@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Some random shitty distribution for netbooks.

    Then Ubuntu 11.04 and I have very fond memories of it. But now Ubuntu sucks.

    Using Debian 13 with KDE currently.

  • univers3man@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    My first linux distribution was Linux From Scratch (LFS). I printed like 300 pages at the school library so I could run it at home. My first real distribution was Gentoo or Damn Small Linux.