I have just watched this video and in it 2 things are said that made my Linux newbie heart sink:

  • Debian 13 is not going to get the latest versions of Nvidia drivers and there are better distros for us.
  • Debian in general is not meant to run on the latest hardware.

I am on a regularly upgraded desktop tower gaming PC and currently I have an Nvidia card and an Intel CPU (which, I know, even just because of the mobo chipset is not a great choice).

In this conditions and wanting to invest even more in gaming and new hardware in the future, what should I run on, instead of LMDE 6?

  • krimson@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Debian is awesome. For servers. For desktop I would use something else that pushes updates more frequently.

    My personal opinion ofcourse, use what you like!

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      11 hours ago

      Pika… pika pi!

      Pika… PikaOS?

      Pika pi, pi ka, pi chyuu, pika ¡pi! pika chyuu.

      Pika pika pi chyu chyu pika pi?

      Translation:

      Hey! If you like Debian, but want something a bit more cutting edge…

      Have you heard of PikaOS?

      Roughly, PikaOS is to Debian as Nobara is to Fedora.

      Also, I am hungry, can you spare an onigiri?

    • toynbee@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Yours is the first comment in this thread that didn’t make me want to simultaneously upvote and downvote.

    • felbane@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I have to agree, rolling release distributions are the greatest recent development in desktop linux because they make the surface area for updates small (fewer packages more frequently, so if something breaks you have fewer places to look). Immutable distros make reverting a bad update foolproof.

      I ran bazzite for a while but then my work changed their VPN endpoints to use oauth, which didn’t work on the openvpn2 version available. I switched back to Fedora (which updates pretty frequently, just not constantly) so I could install and use openvpn3. I’m sure I could have figured out a way to get it running by patching it into ostree, but that felt a bit like breaking the rules.

      Debian is the underpinning for all of my homelab gear.